The Collaborative International Dictionary
Discarnate \Dis*car"nate\, a. [L. dis- + carnatus fleshy, fr.
caro, carnis, flesh.]
Stripped of flesh. [Obs.] ``Discarnate bones.''
--Glanvill.
Wiktionary
a. Having no physical body or form.
Usage examples of "discarnate".
Now it would seem that he has done more to combat Statisticalism by discarnating than he ever did in his carnate existence.
Statisticalists are the intellectual heirs of those ancient materialistic thinkers who denied the possibility of any discarnate existence, or of any extraphysical mind, or even of extrasensory perception.
Often spirits suffering from the narcotic evil have come to our circle, and many urgent warnings have been given by discarnate intelligences who were formerly subject to this slavery.
So he bribed this fellow Tarnod, whom I had the pleasure of discarnating, and who was an underservant here at the hunting lodge.
They have to concede memory to this discarnate personality, since it was by recovery of memories of previous reincarnations that discarnate existence and reincarnation were proven to be facts.
God is on all men through his servants who are the discarnate souls of people who have walked this world before us.
They also believe that discarnate individualities can communicate with one another, and with at least some carnate individualities, by telepathy," he said.
Unlike most of his fellows, who reincarnated into other peasant families almost immediately after discarnation, this man waited for fifty years in the discarnate state for an opportunity to reincarnate as the son of an over-servant.