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  1. Dictionary
    lac·er·ate
    /ˈlasəˌrāt/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of LACERATE is to tear or rend roughly : wound jaggedly. How to use lacerate in a sentence.

  3. /ˌlæsəˈreɪt/ IPA guide. Other forms: lacerated; lacerating; lacerates. The verb lacerate means to cut or tear. So the envelope that gave you that nasty paper cut? It lacerated your finger. Something usually needs to be sharp or jagged to lacerate you, like broken glass or a sharp stick.

  4. to criticize someone or attack them with words in a very powerful way: Critics have lacerated the press for getting the facts wrong in this case. As a political cartoonist, he likes to lacerate the pompous and the powerful. Fewer examples. The blow broke his jaw and lacerated his lip.

  5. verb (used with object) , lac·er·at·ed, lac·er·at·ing. to tear roughly; mangle: The barbed wire lacerated his hands. Synonyms: rend. to distress or torture mentally or emotionally; wound deeply; pain greatly: His bitter criticism lacerated my heart.

  6. If something lacerates your skin, it cuts it badly and deeply. Its claws lacerated his thighs. [VERB noun] [ Also VERB] Synonyms: tear, cut, wound, rend [literary] More Synonyms of lacerate. lacerated adjective. She was suffering from a badly lacerated hand. More Synonyms of lacerate.

  7. to criticize someone or attack them with words in a very powerful way: Critics have lacerated the press for getting the facts wrong in this case. As a political cartoonist, he likes to lacerate the pompous and the powerful. Fewer examples. The blow broke his jaw and lacerated his lip.

  8. lacerate something to cut skin or part of the body with something sharp. His hand had been badly lacerated.

  9. 1. To rip, cut, or tear. 2. To cause deep emotional pain to; distress. adj. (-rĭt, -rāt′) 1. Torn; mangled. 2. Wounded. 3. Having jagged, deeply cut edges: lacerate leaves. [Middle English laceraten, from Latin lacerāre, lacerāt-, from lacer, torn .] American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

  10. noun [countable, uncountable] She suffered multiple lacerations to the face. See lacerate in the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Definition of lacerate verb in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  11. The earliest known use of the verb lacerate is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for lacerate is from before 1425, in Guy de Chauliac's Grande Chirurgie . lacerate is a borrowing from Latin.

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