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Entrails
noun
Plural of entrail
Exact(60)
I am eating the rabbit," complete with photos of its carcass on her kitchen counter and her cat scoffing the entrails.
Another one cut his stomach open and there were entrails and that.
The decision comes in a month in which the entrails of France's one-time ruling elite have been spilling out.
Moose can weigh 1,000lb, or 455 kilos, even after being gutted (it is best to leave the entrails in the woods).
It has announced a parliamentary inquiry into the behaviour of the banks, brushing aside Labour's demands for a judicial inquiry as an attempt to postpone the post-mortem.It is not just the venality of the bankers' misdeeds that fuels the government's enthusiasm for picking over the entrails of the scandal.
Exploring the decision's entrails, he said, "may not be a pretty story".In this section Princelings and the goon state Keep quiet and carry on The fast and the furious Flailing Game over A Rudd return?
Mr McCain has won one battle but has a long march ahead.Fraternal enemiesThe Democratic contest had none of the Republican one's clarity, and the pundits are still probing the entrails for guidance.
On March 17th those limits widened from 1% to 2%.In this section A long and winding road Peering into the entrails Spring in the air The charm of the BBC Clarity gap Deconstruction delays Final call Staying unconventional Marjorie Deane internship ReprintsThe yuan soon explored its new roaming room, falling by more than 1% from its benchmark during trading on March 19th and 20th.
The north-east might be able to develop a healthier economy were it not so reliant on state subsidy: 61.9% of regional GDP is spent on the public sector, according to the Centre for Economics and Business Research.There ought to be more to the northern story than examining the entrails of the industrial past and proffering subsidy and sympathy.
In between we learn about an unhappy childhood, the insecurity it caused and the reasons for his passion for privacy.This is a long book, but it is so well paced that there are no longueurs, even when Mr Read, a Catholic himself, digs into the entrails of Guinness's Catholicism.
WHEN the ancient Romans wanted to know what was going to happen, they called on some rather specialised priests, known as haruspices, to examine the entrails of a slaughtered animal.
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