To damage or destroy something.
Example: That dog was mutilated with sharp tools.
To change Examples: Mutate Mutilate
Some words that contain the root word "onym" are synonym (meaning a word with a similar meaning), antonym (meaning a word with the opposite meaning), and homonym (meaning a word that sounds the same but has a different meaning).
The homophone for select meaning "to choose" is "selekt."
sambandham is the Telugu meaning for relation
An expression of a meaning that contradicts the literal meaning is called an idiom. Idioms are phrases that have a figurative rather than literal meaning, often making them difficult to understand when translated directly.
try maim
A sentence for the word mutilate might include: "Your terrible singing voice is going to mutilate that pretty song." Mutilate is defined as damage or destroy.
Mutilate Me was created on 2011-04-12.
Meaning 1: cut, chop, slash, mutilate, mangle, mangulate, hew, lacerate Meaning 2: reporter, writer, correspondent, journalist, scribbler, contributor
Mutilate is a word that means to cause injury due to violence. A good sentence would be, his intent was to mutilate the boys arm.
mutiler
To change Examples: Mutate Mutilate
A slasher film is a horror film where the villain(s) use a sharp object from knives and swords to chainsaws to haunt and mutilate their victims.
He's seen his mother's Woohoo intimately. Would you mutilate your eyes too.
destroy, destruct, deface
Hawk - 1966 Do Not Mutilate or Spindle 1-1 was released on: USA: 8 September 1966
The word 'mutilate', meaning to permanently damage or severely injure, isn't formed using a prefix. The word begins with the Latin root 'mutil-' (see below), but this isn't identified as a prefix in English, although it forms the beginning of words, usually related to 'mutilate', in other languages, notably Italian and Spanish.The modern English word 'mutilate', first recorded in the 1530s relating to things (including animals) and in the 1560s relating to people, can be traced back to the Latin 'mutilare' (to cut, or lop, off), from 'mutilus' (maimed).There is a suffix involved: '-ate', indicating, as a verb suffix, to 'act, cause, make, and so on', from the Latin, '-are' as in 'mutilare', above.The English term, 'mutilation', from late Latin, dates back to the 1700s.