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 gore [gɒ:]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 流出的血, 淤血, 三角形布

vt. 把...剪成楔形三角布, 缝以补裆, 刺伤, 抵


  1. The fox lay dying in a pool of gore.
    狐狸倒在血泊中奄奄一息。
  2. A vertical section of fabric; a gore.
    编织品的垂直部分;三角形布
  3. His gorge rose at the sight of gore.
    他一看到血污就作呕。


gore
[ noun ]
  1. Vice President of the United States under Bill Clinton (born in 1948)

  2. <noun.person>
  3. coagulated blood from a wound

  4. <noun.body>
  5. a piece of cloth that is generally triangular or tapering; used in making garments or umbrellas or sails

  6. <noun.artifact>
  7. the shedding of blood resulting in murder

  8. <noun.act>
    he avenged the bloodshed of his kinsmen
[ verb ]
  1. wound by piercing with a sharp or penetrating object or instrument

  2. <verb.contact>
  3. cut into gores

  4. <verb.contact>
    gore a skirt


Gore \Gore\, n. [AS. gor dirt, dung; akin to Icel. gor, SW.
gorr, OHG. gor, and perh. to E. cord, chord, and yarn; cf.
Icel. g["o]rn, garnir, guts.]
1. Dirt; mud. [Obs.] --Bp. Fisher.

2. Blood; especially, blood that after effusion has become
thick or clotted. --Milton.


Gore \Gore\, n. [OE. gore, gare, AS. g?ra angular point of land,
fr. g?r spear; akin to D. geer gore, G. gehre gore, ger
spear, Icel. geiri gore, geir spear, and prob. to E. goad.
Cf. {Gar}, n., {Garlic}, and {Gore}, v.]
1. A wedgeshaped or triangular piece of cloth, canvas, etc.,
sewed into a garment, sail, etc., to give greater width at
a particular part.

2. A small traingular piece of land. --Cowell.

3. (Her.) One of the abatements. It is made of two curved
lines, meeting in an acute angle in the fesse point.

Note: It is usually on the sinister side, and of the tincture
called tenn['e]. Like the other abatements it is a
modern fancy and not actually used.


Gore \Gore\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Gored}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Goring}.] [OE. gar spear, AS. g?r. See 2d {Gore}.]
To pierce or wound, as with a horn; to penetrate with a
pointed instrument, as a spear; to stab.

The low stumps shall gore
His daintly feet. --Coleridge.


Gore \Gore\, v. t.
To cut in a traingular form; to piece with a gore; to provide
with a gore; as, to gore an apron.

  1. Mr. McCarry's prose makes the gore bright and the pain real.
  2. A good fighting bull must be strong, and so fierce that it will charge straight at the picador's horse and stubbornly try to gore the matador's red cape.
  3. The horror was lost in the greater gore of Civil War and presidential assassination.
  4. Finally, though, "Dark Shadows" is less about gore than pulp romance, less Freddy Krueger than Jane Eyre.
  5. Their stories of crime, horror and war curdled with violence, gore and bosomy babes in naughty clothes, serious bondage and bad relationships.
  6. Millions have worn uniforms and served with distinction in many critically important ways, but only a small portion of those uniforms ever reeked of gunpowder or were splattered by friends' gore.
  7. In the 1980s, local news programs offer heavy doses of gore, especially during the ratings sweeps.
  8. There is a sound Gothic tradition in English letters, from "Monk" Lewis to Mary Shelley, where writers, often on the left, occasionally dip their nibs in gore.
  9. But this scenario of lots of glory and little gore may prove more fantasy than reality in a modern war in the exposed desert.
  10. The glitter business, known for choking our tubes with glitz, gore and cheap canned thrills, decided to be sober, industrious and subdued this year.
  11. Navarre Hospital said a 24-year-old Spaniard who fell before a bull suffered a deep gore wound to the neck and was in very serious condition.
  12. "Friday the 13th VII" inevitably found disfavor with the ratings board of the Motion Picture Association of America, which immediately branded the film with an X for extreme gore.
  13. Alas, while they are out hunting themselves up, they also find mayhem and gore.
  14. "Our aim is to tell what happened, not why, as accurately and dispassionately as possible, without glory or gore.
  15. Even so, special effects supervisor John Vulich says Savini is trying to keep the gore to a minimum.
  16. Moody, whose latest addition to the world of crime fiction is called "Playing With Fire," said she prefers not to emphasize gore in her books.
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