(v. t.) To take or let out the bowels or interior parts of; to eviscerate.
(v. t.) To take or draw from the body, as the web of a spider.
Example Sentences:
(1) Other parts of England, particularly in the north, are of course familiar with similar closures and cutbacks, but in Lancashire they amount to a cultural disembowelment.
(2) As Syria disembowels itself, politicians stand back, unable to act and unable to admit the mistakes they made in Iraq.
(3) The abrupt departure of its chief executive Brendan Eich , who was in place for just 10 days, has lifted the spirits of some inside the organisation that built Firefox – but left others unhappy that it had to go through such a public disembowelling, with board members resigning, a media frenzy, and disquiet in the ranks.
(4) In the final stages of the second world war, just over 500 V2 rockets swooped down upon London, disembowelling entire streets without warning, sending mountainous halos of jet-black smoke swirling into the sky, and leaving parts of the city looking like the surface of the moon.
(5) In the opening episode alone, five prison guards are disemboweled, an FBI agent is stabbed in the chest, two women are gutted, and – ruh–roh – a german shepherd has its eyes gouged out.
(6) Well, I thought, after Only God Forgives, that makes two movies in a row Nicolas Winding Refn has got through without disembowelling a single person.
(7) The show’s millions of fans aren’t going to be kept happy with routine beheadings and disembowelments, with a penectomy thrown in for fun.
(8) I understood that the critical battle lines now are not left versus right, but the 1% neoliberal globalisers making off with all of the loot and disembowelling the middle class.
(9) For these diffident young reverends may have been among those currently on Glasgow University’s theology course, which has been offering the future padres a safe zone if they become squeamish about the scenes of evisceration and disembowelling that regularly feature in the Good Book.
(10) You quickly get used to his work: after a while, you stop noticing the all-too-realistic eyeballs that follow you around the room, the disembowelments, the inhuman flesh, the wild sex, the decay, the decadence.
(11) When he did and Johnson stepped aside , a so-called grandee, Michael Heseltine, was on hand to disembowel the corpse.
(12) They've bullied you because you were born with the sort of nose that, in Roman times, would have had men ritually disembowelling themselves in order to spend five minutes in your presence.
(13) On one occasion a man was killed, publicly disembowelled and his intestines stretched across a road to form another checkpoint.
(14) Commercial is violence, blood, sex, horror," rumbles director Harry Kümel, a voluminously bearded pensioner in a sensible jumper who discusses murderous lesbians and ritualistic disembowelment with the polite weariness of a vicar extracting cress from a BHS egg bap.
(15) Ultimately, no amount of dubbed disembowelings can drown out one's sobs of gratitude that there's still a place where this sort of thing – understated, considered, insightful, not crap – is allowed to exist.
Spider
Definition:
(n.) Any one of numerous species of arachnids comprising the order Araneina. Spiders have the mandibles converted into poison fangs, or falcers. The abdomen is large and not segmented, with two or three pairs of spinnerets near the end, by means of which they spin threads of silk to form cocoons, or nests, to protect their eggs and young. Many species spin also complex webs to entrap the insects upon which they prey. The eyes are usually eight in number (rarely six), and are situated on the back of the cephalothorax. See Illust. under Araneina.
(n.) Any one of various other arachnids resembling the true spiders, especially certain mites, as the red spider (see under Red).
(n.) An iron pan with a long handle, used as a kitchen utensil in frying food. Originally, it had long legs, and was used over coals on the hearth.
(n.) A trevet to support pans or pots over a fire.
(n.) A skeleton, or frame, having radiating arms or members, often connected by crosspieces; as, a casting forming the hub and spokes to which the rim of a fly wheel or large gear is bolted; the body of a piston head; a frame for strengthening a core or mold for a casting, etc.
Example Sentences:
(1) You’d be staggered by the number of dimwitted debutantes who stand for photos next to cakes iced with the famous double-C. You know how you wanted a Spider-Man cake when you were little, and your mum made you Spider-Man cake, and it was the happiest birthday of your life?
(2) Britain is still sending regular reinforcements across the Atlantic, from the new Spider-Man signing ( Tom Holland from Surrey ), to the actors who have recently snatched real-life national archetypes like Abraham Lincoln ( Daniel Day-Lewis ), Ernest Hemingway (Clive Owen) and Martin Luther King (David Oyelowo ) from the grasp of American stars.
(3) I'd like to say it's all a biting satire of American military practices (I know Busty Cops Go Hawaiian certainly was) but chances are it's just about a bunch of big meanie spiders.
(4) Venom is attractive because the character can exist without Spider-Man and has embarked on its own adventures when in sync with Brock.
(5) Giant spiders from Mars This is particularly handy later, when we encounter the mid-level boss, a giant spider-like vehicle known as a Fallen Walker.
(6) A 4-year-old girl was admitted 30 hours after being bitten by a black widow spider.
(7) But it also succeeded by elevating the likes of Luke Skywalker and Han Solo to the kind of status usually reserved for totemic superheroes such as Batman, Superman and Spider-Man, characters destined to be wheeled out time and time again in different big screen iterations.
(8) "I was in a squatted house that was falling down, with spiders everywhere.
(9) Electron micrographs of protein 4.1-labelled colloidal gold particles incubated at 4 degrees C with spectrin dimers reveal that 1-5 spectrin dimers attach to each protein 4.1-labelled colloidal gold particle yielding a spider-like appearance of these complexes.
(10) Necrotic arachnidism was seen only in areas where populations of Tegenaria agrestis spiders were well established and did not occur where Tegenaria agrestis was absent.
(11) Thirty-eight spider phobics completed the Questionnaire on Mental Imagery (QMI) and the Spider Questionnaire (SPQ).
(12) The Cave is a mining scene complete with treasure chest, giant spider, zombie and a “Steve” minifigure.
(13) The availability of selective drugs (such as dihydropyridines) and natural toxins (such as omega-Conotoxin, omega-agatoxin, and funnel-web spider toxins), which bind to specific channel subtypes, has greatly helped in channel classification.
(14) A high number of spiders in the pastures (3-4 specimens per sq.
(15) • The Wall Street Journal uncovers communications between Sony and Marvel discussing a Spider-Man crossover and speaking disparagingly about Spider-Man star Andrew Garfield.
(16) It was like a superhero's origin story: Peter Parker's bedroom before he became Spider-Man.
(17) The replication becomes impossible to hold back because any time a web server gains a new file and is queried by the search engines' "spiders" – which go out looking to see what has changed on the web – the cache of the web is updated, with the location of the new file.
(18) What made this so troubling he said, is that digital spiders could then crawl the web and find every picture in the public domain and match it with an identity.
(19) Last Saturday a man dressed as Spider-Man was arrested and charged with hitting a police officer who tried to intervene during a dispute with a woman who offered him $1 (59p).
(20) Bowie’s first US tour saw him play as Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars.