| 释义 | 
		mutilatemu‧ti‧late /ˈmjuːtəleɪt/ verb [transitive]    mutilateOrigin: 1500-1600 Latin past participle of mutilare, from mutilus  ‘mutilated’  VERB TABLEmutilate |
 | Present | I, you, we, they | mutilate |   | he, she, it | mutilates |  | Past | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | mutilated |  | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have mutilated |   | he, she, it | has mutilated |  | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had mutilated |  | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will mutilate |  | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have mutilated |  
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 | Present | I | am mutilating |   | he, she, it | is mutilating |   | you, we, they | are mutilating |  | Past | I, he, she, it | was mutilating |   | you, we, they | were mutilating |  | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have been mutilating |   | he, she, it | has been mutilating |  | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had been mutilating |  | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will be mutilating |  | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have been mutilating |  
    - Blood poured down from her mutilated face.
 
 - A police officer said his corpse was so charred and mutilated that it took more than an hour to identify it.
 - First, the sisters mutilate their feet to make the slipper fit.
 - Mariama was the first woman in the village to stand up against the traditional practice and refused to have her daughters mutilated.
 - Police in Prague thought the pics were of real mutilated bodies.
 - The third group includes patients who mutilate themselves, usually in the context of a serious psychiatric illness.
 - Two shells fell shortly before 9 p. m. that night, killing 74 people and injuring or mutilating nearly 200 more.
 - With other mutilated veterans in Rumania, later, he had been thrown from a moving train.
 
   1to severely and violently damage someone’s body, especially by cutting or removing part of it:   The prisoners had been tortured and mutilated.  extra protection for mental patients who might mutilate themselves2to damage or change something so much that it is completely spoiled:   The sculpture was badly mutilated in the late eighteenth century.—mutilation /ˌmjuːtəˈleɪʃən/ noun [countable, uncountable]  |