- Causing or capable of causing emotional shock or loss of consciousness.
- Of a strikingly attractive appearance.
- Impressive: gave a stunning performance.
- Surprising: The President's final decision came with stunning suddenness.
Dictionary:
stun·ning (stŭn'ĭng) ![]() |
| Thesaurus: stunning |
adjective
| Antonyms: stunning |
Definition: beautiful, marvelous
Antonyms: homely, ordinary, ugly, unattractive
| Hacker Slang: stunning |
Mind-bogglingly stupid. Usually used in sarcasm. “You want to code what in Ada? That's a ... stunning idea!”
| Architecture: stunning |
The deep scoring or bruising of building stone, esp. by careless cutting.
| Veterinary Dictionary: stunning |
Producing unconsciousness by a blow. See stunner. Various methods are used including a hammer blow, free bullet using a number of different projectiles, immersion of the head in carbon dioxide gas, electric shock, all of them aiming to allow the animal to bleed out while it is still alive. An animal that is dead before it has bled out will be unsuitable for marketing.
| Wikipedia: Stunning |
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Stunning is the process of rendering animals immobile or unconscious prior to their being slaughtered for food.
Contents |
This process has been common for centuries in the case of cattle, who were poleaxed prior to being bled out. In the United Kingdom and Europe more widely the development of stunning technologies occurred largely in the first half of the twentieth century.
Prior to humane slaughter pistols and electric stunners, pigs, sheep and other animals (including cattle) were simply struck while fully conscious. The belief that this was unnecessarily cruel and painful to the animal being slaughtered led to the compulsory adoption of stunning methods in many countries. The Humane Slaughter Act of 1933 in Britain, for example, was specifically conceived not only to make stunning compulsory, but moreover to make modern methods, such as the captive bolt pistol and electric tongs, the means by which it was achieved. The wording of the 1933 act specifically outlaws the poleaxe. The period is marked by the development of various innovations in slaughterhouse technologies, not all of them particularly long-lasting.
Stunning is regulated by the provisions of the Humane Methods of Slaughter Act (7 U.S.C. 1901), which the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) is mandated to uphold under the Federal Meat Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 603 (b)). No similar provision exists in the Poultry Products Inspection Act (21 U.S.C. 451 et seq.). After confirmation of the first U.S. BSE case, FSIS issued regulations (69 FR 1887, January 12, 2004) prohibiting the use of the most widely used stunning device (air-injection captive bolt stun gun) because the compressed air (in contrast to the blank cartridge-driven or non-penetrating captive bolt) has been shown to force pieces of brain and other central nervous system (CNS) tissue into the bloodstream. Cattle blood is processed primarily for use as a protein supplement in animal feeds and milk replacer for calves, and could potentially transmit BSE if it contained specified risk materials (SRMs include brain and CNS tissue).[1]
In modern slaughterhouses a variety of slaughter methods are used on livestock. Methods include:
Electrical stunning is done by applying a current through the brain of the animal before slaughter. An epileptic shock is induced by overloading the neurons, which would render the animal incapable of feeling pain. It is a controversial subject however. With chickens for example, overstunning leads to bone fractures and/or electrocution which prevents bleeding of the animal. This negatively affects the quality of the meat, and therefore understunning is an attractive practice for slaughterhouses.
In the Netherlands, for example, the law states that poultry must be stunned for 4 seconds minimum with an average current of 100 mA, which leads to systematic understunning.
With gas stunning animals are exposed to a mixture of gases (CO2 for example, but historically CO or mustard gas was used) to suffocate the creatures.
With percussive stunning, a device which hits the animal on the head, with or without penetration, is employed. Such devices, such as the captive bolt pistol, can be either pneumatic, or powder-actuated.
| Look up stunning in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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| Translations: Stunning |
Dansk (Danish)
adj. - forbavsende, bedøvende, overvældende, fantastisk, pragtfuld
Nederlands (Dutch)
verbluffend
Français (French)
adj. - sensationnel, stupéfiant, étourdissant
Deutsch (German)
adj. - umwerfend, sensationell
Ελληνική (Greek)
adj. - καταπληκτικός, εκπάγλου καλλονής
Português (Portuguese)
adj. - atordoante, excepcionalmente belo
Русский (Russian)
оглушающий, сногсшибательный, великолепный
Español (Spanish)
adj. - asombroso, pasmoso, sorprendente
Svenska (Swedish)
adj. - bedövande, chockande, häpnadsväckande, jättesnygg, överdådig
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
足以使人晕倒的, 极好的
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
adj. - 足以使人暈倒的, 極好的
한국어 (Korean)
adj. - 기절 시키는, 놀랄 만큼 아름다운
日本語 (Japanese)
adj. - 気絶させる, すばらしい
العربيه (Arabic)
(صفه) فتان, ساحر, مذهل
עברית (Hebrew)
adj. - מקסים, נפלא
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