Read full poem →wordless nondescript genie of trunk trickled firm- ly in to one
exactly-mutilated ghost of a chair,
Dictionary Entry
To physically harm as to impair use, notably by cutting off or otherwise disabling a vital part, such as a limb.
Origin
Origin details are still being enriched for this entry.
Common Phrases
Antonyms
No antonyms yet.
Related Words
Poetry examples for “mutilated”
Excerpts from the ReadingWillow English Library collection.
Read full poem →1642 while on his way to secure supplies for the Huron mis-
sions. He was tortured, mutilated, and for thirteen months
held as a slave at Auriesville about forty miles west of Al-
Read full poem →Marlowe’s life and the text of his work, which reaches us rather
mutilated, have been examined at length by scholarship, but literary
criticism has been oddly scanty. There was a history-of-ideas study
Read full poem →Business Office will replace copies lost or
mutilated.
