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innard

adv. (eye dialect of inward English) n. entrail; gut; intestine.

Usage examples of "innard".

Something was surging in my innards, and from the taste leaping into my mouth--even befouled as it was--it was some sort of mutton.

And then I finally succumbed to the roiling of my innards and unleashed what was within.

He clawed at his own innards, tucking them back inside himself with hands that blazed with silver flames, and was still about it, feeling sick and weak despite the roused, surging divine power, when his boot heels found something solid at last.

Their bodies were visibly shriveling, sucked dry of blood and innards with the same unnerving speed as everything else this spell-tree did.

She was waiting by the duskwood when he came back through the trees bearing a large bundle whose innards clashed steel upon steel from time to time as he moved.

Julia was looking at the innards of the booth as though it were a house of horrors.

Jackson said with what Celeste found to be surprising perception for a man obsessed with the innards of computers.