What's the difference between disembowelment and evisceration?

Disembowelment


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of disemboweling, or state of being disemboweled; evisceration.

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.

Evisceration


Definition:

  • (a.) A disemboweling.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) As with alloplastic orbital implant extrusions in enucleated sockets, autogeneous dermis fat grafts can be useful in managing extrusions in previously eviscerated sockets.
  • (2) In general, for these individuals there is minimal disruption of the periocular tissues, thus, reducing fitting problems associated with enucleation and evisceration.
  • (3) In a cross-sectional study of 144 slaughterhouse workers, a cumulative prevalence of current and anamnestic cases of protein contact dermatitis of 22% was found, with the highest prevalence in workers eviscerating and cleansing gut.
  • (4) However, our data showed that 31 (25%) of the confirmed cases occurred in workers at the further processing plant who had contact only with previously eviscerated carcasses.
  • (5) Never mind Tory spending cuts; they would be dwarfed by the SNP cuts necessary to keep the Scottish economy afloat in the radically altered market conditions we now face.” But despite “that rational evisceration of the SNP’s economic policies”, polls showed support for the SNP was now higher than at the time of the referendum.
  • (6) Complete restoration of plasma cholesterol patterns to intact animal levels was seen only when the pancreas, liver and kidneys were left functional in the eviscerated rat.
  • (7) Short-term experiments were performed on dogs anesthetized with pentobarbital and prepared by abdominal evisceration, cholecystectomy, and bile duct cannulation.
  • (8) A three to four-fold increase in carcass contamination was observed after evisceration.
  • (9) He went with a bang not a whimper: two of his last contributions to the New Republic were a trenchant critique of the history of the six-day war by Michael Oren, now Israeli ambassador to Washington, and an evisceration of Koba the Dread, Martin Amis's purported book on Stalin.
  • (10) The most serious late complication during the entire follow-up period was endo-ophthalmitis in 8 eyes which in 5 patients after an interval up to 12 months following operation ended by evisceration of the bulbus--in all instances Russian lenses which were sterilized by ourselves were involved.
  • (11) When high priority is given to the prevention of evisceration, the 'open' method of castration should be abandoned.
  • (12) We have used 'left upper abdominal evisceration plus Appleby's method (LUAE + Apl.)'
  • (13) To test the rate of protein degradation in muscles under more physiological conditions, in vitro methods were adapted for use in rats whose skeletal muscles had been isolated intact by an evisceration procedure.
  • (14) Mesenteric avulsions required resection in five cases--the eviscerated bowel was replaced and the entrapped bowel resected.
  • (15) The records of 12 hospitals of Moscow over a year evidence 678 enucleations and eviscerations, 248 (39 percent) of these for oncologic diseases, 189 (29.1 percent) because of injury aftereffects, 153 (24 percent) because of glaucoma, and 58 (8 percent) because of ocular inflammations.
  • (16) They don't seem to be eviscerating the Inter defence with their usual verve and are losing possession more often than you'd expect as a result of misplaced passes and poor touches.
  • (17) Repair of these perforations was complicated by the extremely thin corneas and six eyes had to be either enucleated or eviscerated.
  • (18) Core biopsies, which were performed after evisceration, were compared with macroscopic and microscopic findings of the entire prostatic gland.
  • (19) Evisceration may be indicated in patients with blind and unsightly or painful eyes and in selected instances of ocular trauma following discussion of the risk of sympathetic ophthalmia with the patient.
  • (20) Major abnormalities included gastroschisis and evisceration, maxillary hypoplasia and interatrial, and interventricular septal defects.

Words possibly related to "disembowelment"

Words possibly related to "evisceration"