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The act of cutting so as to cause the viscera to protrude
Answer for the clue "The act of cutting so as to cause the viscera to protrude ", 12 letters:
evisceration
Alternative clues for the word evisceration
Word definitions for evisceration in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
An evisceration is the removal of the eye 's contents, leaving the scleral shell and extraocular muscles intact. The procedure is usually performed to reduce pain or improve cosmesis in a blind eye, as in cases of endophthalmitis unresponsive to antibiotics ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Evisceration \E*vis`cer*a"tion\, a. A disemboweling.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1620s, noun of action from eviscerate .
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 A disemboweling; the removal of viscera 2 A vigorous verbal assault
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. surgical removal of an organ (or the contents of an organ) from a patient the act of removing the bowels or viscera; the act of cutting so as to cause the viscera to protrude [syn: disembowelment ] altering something (as a legislative act or a statement) ...
Usage examples of evisceration.
Yet his unexpected evisceration was destined to enable the greatest menace to the health of the United States since the swine flu to flourish in the very temple Gregory Green Gideon had consecrated to saving America from dietary perdition.
In world myth and folklore, many images are seen: a woman weaving, stands of laurel trees, an elephant jumping off a cliff, a girl with a basket on her back, a rabbit, the lunar intestines spilled out on its surface after evisceration by an irritable flightless bird, a woman pounding tapa cloth, a four-eyed jaguar.
In fact, Scop leaned forward, thrust out his hands in a rigid, militaristic gesture to do just that, to begin the slaughter and evisceration of Robert Kennedy.
She had been thirty-six hours in parturition, and by evisceration and craniotomy was delivered of a child weighing 16 pounds.
American metropolis of the predynastic epoch his thoughts are cluttered with images of the gallows and electricity, slow evisceration and constant pain.
Chris knew from commissary gossip that a lot of the eviscerations, amputations, decapitations, and defenestrations in these monster adventures were not special effects and had nothing to do with stunt men.
The stink of evisceration hit Joe hard enough to knock him to the edge of an anxiety attack: the familiar sense of falling, falling as from a great height.
In fact, Scop leaned forward, thrust out his hands in a rigid, militaristic gesture to do just that, to begin the slaughter and evisceration of Robert Kennedy.