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Examples

  • "Eviscerated" was how, in a Pentagon press briefing in October 2001, Newbold had described the state of Taliban fighters after American air strikes early in the war in Afghanistan.

    The Night of the Generals Margolick, David 2007

  • Eviscerated worms and black bits overturned beneath the earth and hauled up by shoveling hands.

    The Fields William Owen 2011

  • How America's Middle Class Was Eviscerated by Bushco, the CIA, and the Republican Overclass yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = 'How America\'s Middle Class Was Eviscerated by Bushco, the CIA, and the Republican Overclass'; yahooBuzzArticleSummary = 'Article: More than 100% of the growth in Gross Domestic Product over the past five years is attributable to the expansion of debt.

    How America's Middle Class Was Eviscerated by Bushco, the CIA, and the Republican Overclass 2008

  • The vivid verb became the basis of a front-page headline in theWashington Post: Pentagon: Taliban Forces ‘Eviscerated.’

    The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time William Safire 2004

  • The vivid verb became the basis of a front-page headline in theWashington Post: Pentagon: Taliban Forces ‘Eviscerated.’

    The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time William Safire 2004

  • Eviscerated: entrails oozing from deep torso rips.

    Hollywood Nocturne Ellroy, James 1994

  • Eviscerated ancient right of Englishmen and Americans--habeas corpus

    Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion 2010

  • Hooray, YouTube Not Eviscerated by Viacom Lawsuit - Epic news: The long fight between Viacom and Google is partially resolved, with the U.S.

    Megite Technology News: What's Happening Right Now 2010

  • Increased federal spending and taxes collectedeach year * Eviscerated ancient right of Englishmen and Americans -- habeas corpus * Flunked the acid test of economic sanity -- raising the minimum wage (mandatory unemployment law) * Passed Freedom to Farm Act (at taxpayers 'expense, that is)

    Latest Articles 2009

  • Eviscerated, not robust at all, and what Paul Krugman now calls "medium-strength."

    CounterPunch 2009

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