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entrails

[ US /ˈɛntɹəɫz/ ]
[ UK /ˈɛntɹe‍ɪlz/ ]
NOUN
  1. internal organs collectively (especially those in the abdominal cavity)
    `viscera' is the plural form of `viscus'

How To Use entrails In A Sentence

  • The function of the haruspices was divination of the future from the entrails of sacrificial animals.
  • The poor had to make do with giblets and entrails which was known as umble pie. The Sun
  • To my horror, Tulsi Pipe Road was now shamefully dug up, its bowels exposed and the entrails left lying on one side for the world to see.
  • A few cars had smashed windscreens and the entrails of radios strewn over the seats and onto the pavement where the doors had been wrenched open.
  • In some cases, entrails of slaughtered animals are served back to others ‘stuck in the queue’ at slaughterhouses.
  • Offal is described as the "entrails and internal organs of a butchered animal," which tend to be less common meat cuts and pieces. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • Then he looks at the liver of a sheep, but reading entrails is as old as campfires and rocks so that's not a big surprise. Cross Pollination and Wiscon: brace yourself for rambling
  • In ancient Rome, emperors would divine truth by reading the entrails of animals or vanquished foes.
  • He would make one long incision - the length of the carcass - so that the entrails could be removed.
  • The question has been a live one long before it entered the deep entrails of the European Union's legislative process.
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