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slaughter
1[ slaw-ter ]
noun
- the killing or butchering of cattle, sheep, etc., especially for food.
- the brutal or violent killing of a person.
Synonyms: murder
- the killing of great numbers of people or animals indiscriminately; carnage:
the slaughter of war.
verb (used with object)
- to kill or butcher (animals), especially for food.
- to kill in a brutal or violent manner.
- to slay in great numbers; massacre.
- Informal. to defeat thoroughly; trounce:
They slaughtered our team.
Slaughter
2[ slaw-ter ]
noun
- Frank, 1908–2001, U.S. novelist and physician.
slaughter
/ ˈslɔːtə /
noun
- the killing of animals, esp for food
- the savage killing of a person
- the indiscriminate or brutal killing of large numbers of people, as in war; massacre
- informal.a resounding defeat
verb
- to kill (animals), esp for food
- to kill in a brutal manner
- to kill indiscriminately or in large numbers
- informal.to defeat resoundingly
Derived Forms
- ˈslaughterer, noun
- ˈslaughterous, adjective
Other Words From
- slaughter·er noun
- slaughter·ing·ly adverb
- un·slaughtered adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of slaughter1
Word History and Origins
Origin of slaughter1
Idioms and Phrases
see like a lamb to the slaughter .Synonym Study
Example Sentences
In one verse, Saldaña sings/raps Spanish lyrics that translate to: “The chemist, he recently had his business partner and family killed / All to the slaughter! / And what did they do with the corpses? / Acid!”
It was a fascist spectacle — and included a speaker who said the "enemies" of the Trump movement need to be “slaughtered.”
No longer delivered "on the hoof" to cities, cattle were now slaughtered in Chicago and sent East as tinned meat or, after the 1870s, in refrigerated railcars.
“It’s 16 weeks of not knowing whether you live or die by the sort of the episode. You could have a week of wonderful reviews, and then you are slaughtered the next,” she says.
In both states, there are exemptions for lactating dairy cattle destined for slaughter.
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Related Words
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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