释义 |
noun ɡaʃɡæʃ 1A long, deep cut or wound. a bad gash in one leg became infected Example sentencesExamples - He had several deep gashes on his chest and on his arms.
- The most notable damage sustained by either man was an ugly gash above Tyson's right eye, the result of an accidental clash of heads.
- It was only when he was home that he realised he was bleeding from a deep gash to the head and called an ambulance.
- He, who is editor of independent magazine ‘Northern Voices,’ had to be treated for a deep gash to his face and bruising.
- Tommy, a former fitness instructor, suffered deep gashes to both legs in the drama.
- As it is, he wound up with a deep gash on his arm, four broken ribs and a collapsed lung.
- She also suffered deep gashes to her head and chin.
- He comes into the squad after finally overcoming a deep gash to the knee, while Paul also returns.
- There was a bite mark on his arm and a deep gash on his forehead.
- The pensioner was left with one broken leg and a deep gash on the other.
- The deep gashes to his legs, arms and neck were healing nicely and he seemed relaxed.
- He suffered a deep gash on his thigh and was taken to hospital suffering shock, but was later discharged.
- Requiring stitches to a deep gash, it is hoped he will be fit enough for the European adventure.
- The pensioner was left with one broken leg and a deep gash on the other but instead of helping her the rider jumped back on to his moped and rode off.
- Doctors put 16 stitches into two deep gashes in the back of the man's head as a result of his injuries and he suffered post-traumatic stress.
- One drinker suffered a suspected heart attack and another was hit in the face with a piece of glass, causing a deep gash.
- He suffered a deep gash to the leg, which required staples, and he was also left shook up by the incident.
- He said there were three big gashes on his foot which had to be stitched.
- Remove skin from the drumsticks and make deep gashes on each drumstick both inside and outside to allow the marinade to penetrate.
- The youngster was rushed to Bradford Royal Infirmary where he underwent a skin graft on a deep gash to his ankle.
Synonyms laceration, cut, slash, tear, gouge, puncture, score, incision, slit, split, rip, rent, nick, cleft scratch, scrape, graze, abrasion wound, injury, lesion, contusion Medicine trauma, traumatism - 1.1 A cleft made as if by a slashing cut.
the blast ripped a 25-foot gash in the hull Example sentencesExamples - He wanted detailed pictures of the famous gash in her hull.
- The hull is covered with ugly great gashes where it rammed the reef.
- There are deep gashes in the roads; some are still blocked by landslides and a major road tunnel to the town has collapsed.
- Their landing gear gouged huge gashes into the unpaved surface.
- The ship ran aground in 18 feet of water, carving a gash in the living coral and remained grounded for 12 days.
- His wooden boat suffered rips, gashes and leaks during the ordeal, called the ‘green storm’ because of the eerie color of the sky.
- Without warning my foothold broke and I slid downward ripping a gash in the plastic that held the containers of water together.
- The vandal cut a four-inch-deep gash all the way around the trunk - 27 feet in circumference.
- The resultant 12m gash in the hull should have prompted frantic calls for assistance.
- He shoved it hard into the floor and pulled, ripping an ugly gash in an expensive rug.
- He started into a running pattern almost under the vehicle but not quite, stabbing where and when he could, creating gashes under its hull.
- Although some Reading Prong occurrences are localized in part in tension gashes, fissure veins are much more common.
- He lifted it up and placed it against the massive gash in the hull of the freighter.
- In turn, that dent opened into a gash, as the jet gained altitude.
2vulgar slang A woman's vulva. - 2.1offensive mass noun Women collectively regarded in sexual terms.
verb ɡaʃɡæʃ [with object]Make a long, deep cut in. the jagged edges gashed their fingers Example sentencesExamples - After profuse pledges to call me on the intercom to assist her to the bathroom, she proceeded to get up unattended promptly falling on the cane and gashing her shin so badly she was sitting in a pool of blood by the time I got there.
- Its massive knife-like edges beneath the water surface punctured and gashed the ship along 250 feet of its hull.
- A 67-year-old man began calling police from a phone in the hall, but the gang hit him over the head with a baseball bat, gashing his head.
- I gashed my finger, bled everywhere, and was taken off kitchen duty which continued with Sunday service regulars David, his accountant, his wife Angela and Sonia (his PA) helping out.
- A 40-year-old mother had to be airlifted to hospital after gashing her head on a Lakeland ramble.
- The bear roared out his pain as the jagged edges gashed his paw deeply.
- Her right shoulder was gashed open and trickling with blood.
- This time it not only slid out into the room, but it also tilted sharply and bounced the officer off in such a way that he collided with the corner of Clifton's desk and gashed his head open.
- It is my sad duty to report that he has broken his right arm in a bike accident, he has badly bruised his left arm (for those of you who don't know he is left handed) and has badly gashed his chin.
- A washing machine he was putting into the skip slipped backwards, gashing his forehead, splitting his nose and leaving his fingers badly lacerated.
- I tripped, chipping a knee-cap and gashing the flesh.
- The argument ended when his wife threw a glass at him, and gashed his head wide open.
- The sword cut deep into its belly gashing it open.
- First of the physical casualties was he himself, gashing his hand in an accident at home in November, which hampered his training, then he was halted again, this time by a bout of tonsillitis at the start of 2004.
- The first being the edge of a desk, which gashed my left thumb, the second, the back of a chair which caught my cheek bone and the third the edge of the cupboard door which broke my right hand middle finger.
- She gashed her on the left side of her face with the knife and a struggle ensued.
- The Australian smashed her helmet, gashed her elbow, and, more significantly, broke her collarbone in the crash.
- Last year, at the Malaysian resort of Langkawi, he fell down a set of steps, gashing his head.
- You finally get the volume down to less than 100 decibels, your heart is thumping and you notice that you're bleeding through your jeans where the cat gashed your knees during his flight.
- He had swallowed a lot of water, gashed himself badly on the craggy rocks and was wearing a heavy Aran sweater, a pair of heavy boots.
Synonyms lacerate, cut (open), slash, tear (apart), gouge, puncture, incise, score, slit, split, rend, nick, snick, notch, cleave scratch, scrape, graze, abrade wound, injure, hurt, damage, maim
Origin Middle English garse, from Old French garcer 'to chap, crack', perhaps based on Greek kharassein 'sharpen, scratch, engrave'. The current spelling is recorded from the mid 16th century. Rhymes abash, ash, Ashe, bash, brash, cache, calash, cash, clash, crash, dash, encash, flash, gnash, hash, lash, mash, Nash, panache, pash, plash, rash, sash, slash, smash, soutache, splash, stash, thrash, trash noun ɡaʃɡæʃ mass nounBritish informal Rubbish or waste. as modifier the gash bucket Example sentencesExamples - Meal scraps were scraped into the gash bucket by each man after he finished his meal.
- The only manual input to the system is the rubbish hopper, where gash bags are fed into a chute to be shredded, and the galley waste macerator.
Origin 1920s (originally in nautical use): of unknown origin. nounɡaSHɡæʃ 1A long deep slash, cut, or wound. a bad gash in one leg became infected Example sentencesExamples - The pensioner was left with one broken leg and a deep gash on the other but instead of helping her the rider jumped back on to his moped and rode off.
- She also suffered deep gashes to her head and chin.
- He said there were three big gashes on his foot which had to be stitched.
- Remove skin from the drumsticks and make deep gashes on each drumstick both inside and outside to allow the marinade to penetrate.
- He comes into the squad after finally overcoming a deep gash to the knee, while Paul also returns.
- He, who is editor of independent magazine ‘Northern Voices,’ had to be treated for a deep gash to his face and bruising.
- Doctors put 16 stitches into two deep gashes in the back of the man's head as a result of his injuries and he suffered post-traumatic stress.
- There was a bite mark on his arm and a deep gash on his forehead.
- As it is, he wound up with a deep gash on his arm, four broken ribs and a collapsed lung.
- Tommy, a former fitness instructor, suffered deep gashes to both legs in the drama.
- The deep gashes to his legs, arms and neck were healing nicely and he seemed relaxed.
- It was only when he was home that he realised he was bleeding from a deep gash to the head and called an ambulance.
- The pensioner was left with one broken leg and a deep gash on the other.
- Requiring stitches to a deep gash, it is hoped he will be fit enough for the European adventure.
- He suffered a deep gash on his thigh and was taken to hospital suffering shock, but was later discharged.
- The youngster was rushed to Bradford Royal Infirmary where he underwent a skin graft on a deep gash to his ankle.
- He suffered a deep gash to the leg, which required staples, and he was also left shook up by the incident.
- The most notable damage sustained by either man was an ugly gash above Tyson's right eye, the result of an accidental clash of heads.
- He had several deep gashes on his chest and on his arms.
- One drinker suffered a suspected heart attack and another was hit in the face with a piece of glass, causing a deep gash.
Synonyms laceration, cut, slash, tear, gouge, puncture, score, incision, slit, split, rip, rent, nick, cleft - 1.1 A cleft made as if by a slashing cut.
the blast ripped a 25-foot gash in the hull Example sentencesExamples - He lifted it up and placed it against the massive gash in the hull of the freighter.
- He shoved it hard into the floor and pulled, ripping an ugly gash in an expensive rug.
- The resultant 12m gash in the hull should have prompted frantic calls for assistance.
- He started into a running pattern almost under the vehicle but not quite, stabbing where and when he could, creating gashes under its hull.
- The ship ran aground in 18 feet of water, carving a gash in the living coral and remained grounded for 12 days.
- He wanted detailed pictures of the famous gash in her hull.
- The hull is covered with ugly great gashes where it rammed the reef.
- Without warning my foothold broke and I slid downward ripping a gash in the plastic that held the containers of water together.
- In turn, that dent opened into a gash, as the jet gained altitude.
- Their landing gear gouged huge gashes into the unpaved surface.
- There are deep gashes in the roads; some are still blocked by landslides and a major road tunnel to the town has collapsed.
- The vandal cut a four-inch-deep gash all the way around the trunk - 27 feet in circumference.
- His wooden boat suffered rips, gashes and leaks during the ordeal, called the ‘green storm’ because of the eerie color of the sky.
- Although some Reading Prong occurrences are localized in part in tension gashes, fissure veins are much more common.
2vulgar slang The vulva. - 2.1offensive Women collectively regarded in sexual terms.
verbɡaSHɡæʃ [with object]Make a gash in; cut deeply. the jagged edges gashed their fingers Example sentencesExamples - I tripped, chipping a knee-cap and gashing the flesh.
- Last year, at the Malaysian resort of Langkawi, he fell down a set of steps, gashing his head.
- The argument ended when his wife threw a glass at him, and gashed his head wide open.
- The sword cut deep into its belly gashing it open.
- The first being the edge of a desk, which gashed my left thumb, the second, the back of a chair which caught my cheek bone and the third the edge of the cupboard door which broke my right hand middle finger.
- A washing machine he was putting into the skip slipped backwards, gashing his forehead, splitting his nose and leaving his fingers badly lacerated.
- Her right shoulder was gashed open and trickling with blood.
- This time it not only slid out into the room, but it also tilted sharply and bounced the officer off in such a way that he collided with the corner of Clifton's desk and gashed his head open.
- Its massive knife-like edges beneath the water surface punctured and gashed the ship along 250 feet of its hull.
- It is my sad duty to report that he has broken his right arm in a bike accident, he has badly bruised his left arm (for those of you who don't know he is left handed) and has badly gashed his chin.
- He had swallowed a lot of water, gashed himself badly on the craggy rocks and was wearing a heavy Aran sweater, a pair of heavy boots.
- She gashed her on the left side of her face with the knife and a struggle ensued.
- After profuse pledges to call me on the intercom to assist her to the bathroom, she proceeded to get up unattended promptly falling on the cane and gashing her shin so badly she was sitting in a pool of blood by the time I got there.
- The Australian smashed her helmet, gashed her elbow, and, more significantly, broke her collarbone in the crash.
- First of the physical casualties was he himself, gashing his hand in an accident at home in November, which hampered his training, then he was halted again, this time by a bout of tonsillitis at the start of 2004.
- I gashed my finger, bled everywhere, and was taken off kitchen duty which continued with Sunday service regulars David, his accountant, his wife Angela and Sonia (his PA) helping out.
- A 67-year-old man began calling police from a phone in the hall, but the gang hit him over the head with a baseball bat, gashing his head.
- A 40-year-old mother had to be airlifted to hospital after gashing her head on a Lakeland ramble.
- You finally get the volume down to less than 100 decibels, your heart is thumping and you notice that you're bleeding through your jeans where the cat gashed your knees during his flight.
- The bear roared out his pain as the jagged edges gashed his paw deeply.
Synonyms lacerate, cut, cut open, slash, tear, tear apart, gouge, puncture, incise, score, slit, split, rend, nick, snick, notch, cleave
Origin Middle English garse, from Old French garcer ‘to chap, crack’, perhaps based on Greek kharassein ‘sharpen, scratch, engrave’. The current spelling is recorded from the mid 16th century. nounɡaSHɡæʃ British informal Garbage or waste. as modifier the gash bucket Example sentencesExamples - Meal scraps were scraped into the gash bucket by each man after he finished his meal.
- The only manual input to the system is the rubbish hopper, where gash bags are fed into a chute to be shredded, and the galley waste macerator.
Origin 1920s (originally in nautical use): of unknown origin. |