The Collaborative International Dictionary
Entrail \En*trail"\, v. t. [Pref. en- + OF. treiller to grate,
lattice, F. treille vine, arbor. See Trellis.]
To interweave; to intertwine. [Obs.]
--Spenser.
Entrail \En*trail"\, n.
Entanglement; fold. [Obs.]
--Spenser.
Wiktionary
Etymology 1 vb. (context archaic English) To interweave or bind. Etymology 2
n. 1 (context usually in the plural English) An internal organ of an animal. 2 (context obsolete English) Entanglement; fold.
Usage examples of "entrail".
Offered obols thirty for guaranteed divination of chicken entrail, to choose between suitors of daughter.
The smell of bloodkzin blood, mixed with the smells of marrow and entrail and painrose up the passage in a cloud.
The ceiling is painted entrail red and she secretly calls it the abattoir.
That’s all right for taking a gallop in them city parks, but out here you do it all day and it’ll shake an entrail loose.
His head had been flung back, mouth open in black horror as the abdominal gashes spewed entrail strands of translucent turquoise jelly.