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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'carcass for' is not correct and cannot be used in written English
Carcass can be a noun meaning a dead body, or the body of an animal left after it has been butchered for its meat, but it cannot be used for in this context. Correct example: The hungry vultures were feasting on the carcass of a dead deer.
Exact(45)
"They can eat the carcass for a long time.
The Chippewa Harbor wolf pack is feeding on their moose carcass for the third day.
Cold roast chicken, cold fried chicken, a meaty cold chicken carcass for finger-licking nibbling.
In Siberia, melting permafrost released anthrax that had been frozen in a reindeer carcass for decades, starting a deadly outbreak.
Other poaching, such as deer poaching, can be done for sport or to sell the carcass for food.
They had spent the remaining daylight hours arranging with some men in a nearby community to retrieve the carcass for them the next morning.
Similar(14)
While in Amsterdam, around 1630, he visited butchers' shops every day to get carcasses for dissection.
Other researchers were examining the carcasses for information on trauma wounds, reproductive condition, maturity, shark DNA and tumors.
At times, he was doing highly tedious tasks (squeezing duck carcasses for twelve hours, to get the extra ounce of juice that went into a duck stock).
Waves of Mexican and East European immigrants were recruited early in the 20th century to operate the railroads and hoist beef carcasses for Armour, Swift and Cudahy.
Dave Krick, one of the owners of two Boise, Idaho, pubs called the Red Feather Lounge and the Bittercreek Alehouse, said he bought whole beef carcasses for his restaurants.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com