Yes, he is a unit and everyone calls him it
Deep wound laceration
Gash, incision...
Gash, incision...
A stab wound, a sharp instrument trauma, a gash, a slash wound, a cut, a nick...
The word "gash" when used as a noun is defined as a deep cut or wound. When it is used as a verb it means to cut deeply with a knife or other sharp object.
A deep cut according to the medical industry is generally defined as one requiring suturing. Traditional stitches, staples, or liquid stitches may be used to close the wound until it can heal together on its own.
There will most likely be a large gash in the chest, and a symptom is bleeding and/or crying.
wound, cut, damage, trauma, gash, lesion, laceration, harm, suffering, ill, misfortune, affliction
injury, wound, abrasion, bruise, contusion, cut, gash, laceration, scrape, scratch, sore
The wall is constructed from black granite imported from India. A "gash" is a long wound...a slash. Although "probably" never mentioned nor intended by the artist that created the memorial to represent a "gash", it none the less might be fitting that the wall is a black gash; the United States was wounded by the Viet War (as it had been wounded 100 years earlier in 1861).
it means that his internal organs are jutting out of his body from a wound, gash, or hole, "leaking" blood and other bodily fluids.
Scratch and gash both refer to types of skin injuries, with gash indicating a deeper and more severe wound. Similarly, ripple and wave both describe movements on the surface of water, with wave implying a larger and more noticeable disturbance. Therefore, the word that completes the analogy is "wave," as it is the more intense version of ripple, just as gash is the more severe version of scratch.