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Word Meanings - BUTCHER - Book Publishers vocabulary database

orig., slaughterer of buck goats, fr. OF. boc, F. bouc, a buck goat; 1. One who slaughters animals, or dresses their flesh for market; one whose occupation it is to kill animals for food. 2. A slaughterer; one who kills in large numbers, or with

Additional info about word: BUTCHER

orig., slaughterer of buck goats, fr. OF. boc, F. bouc, a buck goat; 1. One who slaughters animals, or dresses their flesh for market; one whose occupation it is to kill animals for food. 2. A slaughterer; one who kills in large numbers, or with unusual cruelty; one who causes needless loss of life, as in battle. "Butcher of an innocent child." Shak. Butcher bird , a species of shrike of the genus Lanius. Note: The Lanius excubitor is the common butcher bird of Europe. In England, the bearded tit is sometimes called the lesser butcher bird. The American species are L.borealis, or northernbutcher bird, and L. Ludovicianus or loggerhead shrike. The name butcher birdis derived from its habit of suspending its prey impaled upon thorns, after killing it. Butcher's meat, such flesh of animals slaughtered for food as is sold for that purpose by butchers, as beef, mutton, lamb, and pork.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of BUTCHER)

Related words: (words related to BUTCHER)

  • IMMOLATE
    To sacrifice; to offer in sacrifice; to kill, as a sacrificial victim. Worshipers, who not only immolate to them the lives of men, but . . . the virtue and honor of women. Boyle. (more info) orig., to sprinkle a victim with sacrifical meal; pref.
  • DEATHLIKE
    1. Resembling death. A deathlike slumber, and a dead repose. Pope. 2. Deadly. "Deathlike dragons." Shak.
  • SLAUGHTER
    1. To visit with great destruction of life; to kill; to slay in battle. Your castle is surprised; your wife and babes Savagely slaughtered. Shak. 2. To butcher; to kill for the market, as beasts.
  • SLAUGHTERHOUSE
    A house where beasts are butchered for the market.
  • BUTCHERING
    1. The business of a butcher. 2. The act of slaughtering; the act of killing cruelly and needlessly. That dreadful butchering of one another. Addison.
  • DESTROYABLE
    Destructible. Plants . . . scarcely destroyable by the weather. Derham.
  • BUTCHER'S BROOM
    A genus of plants ; esp. R. aculeatus, which has large red berries and leaflike branches. See Cladophyll.
  • DEATHLINESS
    The quality of being deathly; deadliness. Southey.
  • BUTCHERLY
    Like a butcher; without compunction; savage; bloody; inhuman; fell. "The victim of a butcherly murder." D. Webster. What stratagems, how fell, how butcherly, This deadly quarrel daily doth beget! Shak.
  • DEATHWATCH
    A small beetle . By forcibly striking its head against woodwork it makes a ticking sound, which is a call of the sexes to each other, but has been imagined by superstitious people to presage death. A small wingless insect, of the family Psocidæ,
  • DEADEN
    Etym: 1. To make as dead; to impair in vigor, force, activity, or sensation; to lessen the force or acuteness of; to blunt; as, to deaden the natural powers or feelings; to deaden a sound. As harper lays his open palm Upon his harp, to deaden its
  • DEATHWARD
    Toward death.
  • MASSACRE
    metzgen, to kill cattle, G. metzger a butcher, and LG. matsken to 1. The killing of a considerable number of human beings under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty, or contrary to the usages of civilized people; as, the massacre on St.
  • BUTCHERLINESS
    Butchery quality.
  • DEADENER
    One who, or that which, deadens or checks.
  • BUTCHER
    1. To kill or slaughter for food, or for market; as, to butcher hogs. 2. To murder, or kill, especially in an unusually bloody or barbarous manner. Macaulay. was murdered, rather butchered. Ford.
  • MASSACRER
    One who massacres.
  • SLAUGHTEROUS
    Destructive; murderous. Shak. M. Arnold. -- Slaugh"ter*ous*ly, adv.
  • DEATH
    Loss of spiritual life. To be death. Rom. viii. 6. 9. Anything so dreadful as to be like death. It was death to them to think of entertaining such doctrines. Atterbury. And urged him, so that his soul was vexed unto death. Judg. xvi. 16. Note: Death
  • DEATHFULNESS
    Appearance of death. Jer. Taylor.
  • DEATHLY
    Deadly; fatal; mortal; destructive.
  • SELF-DESTROYER
    One who destroys himself; a suicide.
  • TORPEDO-BOAT DESTROYER
    A larger, swifter, and more powerful armed type of torpedo boat, originally intended principally for the destruction of torpedo boats, but later used also as a more formidable torpedo boat.
  • SELF-MURDER
    Suicide.
  • MURDER
    The offense of killing a human being with malice prepense or aforethought, express or implied; intentional and unlawful homicide. "Mordre will out." Chaucer. The killing of their children had, in the account of God, the guilt of murder,
  • MANSLAUGHTER
    The unlawful killing of a man, either in negligenc (more info) 1. The slaying of a human being; destruction of men. Milton.

 

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