flense

Etymology

From Danish flense (now spelled flænse).

verb

  1. To strip the blubber or skin from, as from a whale, seal, etc.
    In this domain right sex is capital, it flenses the feelings of all the poisonous artifices brought in by the think-box in the guise of clever ideas. 1974, Lawrence Durrell, Monsieur, Faber & Faber, published 1992, page 198
    His eyes sprang open. Umegat stared straight at him for the fraction of a second, and Cazaril felt flensed. 2001, Lois McMaster Bujold, The Curse of Chalion, page 191
    For that reason, among others, he would never evince the particular guantness, the cut and flagrant sense of purpose - all compromise and capacity for surrender flensed away - which had made Thomas Covenant ir-refusable to her. 2004, Stephen R. Donaldson, The Runes of the Earth Invalid ISBN, page 5
    It engulfed screaming soldiers who disappeared before his eyes, their flesh, armor, even bone, flensed into a suspended mist that was heading straight for them. 2008, Ian C. Esselemont, Return of the Crimson Guard, page 569
    The Lemakot in the north strangled widows and threw them into the cremation pyres of their dead husbands. If they defeated potential invaders the New Irish hanged the vanquished from banyan trees, flensed their windpipes, removed their heads, left their intestines to jerk in the sun. 2011, Dominic Smith, Bright and Distant Shores, page 106

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