different between carrion vs innards
carrion
English
Etymology
Old French caroigne (see modern French charogne), from Latin caro (“flesh”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?kæ.?i.?n/
Noun
carrion (usually uncountable, plural carrions)
- (chiefly uncountable) Dead flesh; carcasses.
- They did eat the dead carrions.
- 1922, Virginia Woolf, Jacob's Room, Vintage Classics, paperback edition, page 119
- Perhaps the Purple Emperor is feasting, as Morris says, upon a mass of putrid carrion at the base of an oak tree.
- (countable, obsolete, derogatory) A contemptible or worthless person.
Derived terms
- carrion beetle
- carrion crow
Translations
carrion From the web:
- carrion meaning
- what cartoon do vultures eat
- what carrion eats
- what carrion means in spanish
- what carrion crows
- what carrion mean in arabic
- carrion what to do after bunker
- carrion what to do as human
innards
English
Etymology
Alteration of inwards.
Pronunciation
Noun
innards
- plural of innard
Noun
innards pl (plural only)
- The internal organs of a human or animal; especially viscera, intestines.
- The inner workings of something; the insides or guts.
Usage notes
- This word is most frequently used in the plural / collective sense, as above.
Translations
innards From the web:
- what innards mean
- what's innards in spanish
- innards what does it mean
- what is innards in tagalog
- what is innards in chinese
- what does innards out mean
- what do innards mean
- what does innards refer to
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