释义 |
[ in-erdz ] / ˈɪn ərdz / SEE SYNONYMS FOR innards ON THESAURUS.COM
noun (used with a plural verb)the internal parts of the body; entrails or viscera. the internal mechanism, parts, structure, etc., of something; the interior of something: an engine's innards. Origin of innards1815–25; variant of inwards, noun use of inward Words nearby innardsin mind, inmost, inn, innage, in name only, innards, innate, innate immunity, innateness hypothesis, innate releasing mechanism, inner Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for innardsOur animators are very excited to be drawing the innards of a human being. ‘Archer’ Creator Adam Reed Spills Season 6 Secrets, From Surreal Plotlines to Life Post-ISIS|Marlow Stern|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST One customer retooled a Nintendo Wii with its innards switched out for glued pennies. The Insane $11 Billion Scam at Retailers’ Return Desks|M.L. Nestel|December 19, 2014|DAILY BEAST Or you can mount a flayed rabbit to hang in your living room while a chef turns its innards into a nose-to-tail feast. Edible Taxidermy: It’s a Good Thing|Lizzie Crocker|August 5, 2014|DAILY BEAST The book delivers a torrent of detail, in a form as precisely machined as the innards of a Swiss watch. The Search for Serious Literary Fiction for Republicans|James McGirk|November 5, 2012|DAILY BEAST
Inside, a bed and other furniture could be seen in the four exposed rooms, like a dollhouse displaying its innards. Tourists in New York Flock to See Damage Wrought by Sandy|Nina Strochlic|November 2, 2012|DAILY BEAST "Us ha' got innards, and they'm called vowels," Master went on. Furze the Cruel|John Trevena Yer d——d muskmelon (Tom's word for musk) makes ye smell jest like hurt skunks; and ye ar skunks, clar through ter the innards. The Continental Monthly , Vol. 2 No. 5, November 1862|Various That blasted stuff's cooked my innards to rags, an' I kin feel my backbone a-sizzlin'. The Red Acorn|John McElroy "I think likely some of my innards has got to be cut out and mended," she said. The Harvester|Gene Stratton Porter I just pitched into those books an tore the innards out of 'em, and then I pitched into that fellow. Atlantic Narratives|Mary Antin
British Dictionary definitions for innards
pl n informalthe internal organs of the body, esp the viscera the interior parts or components of anything, esp the working parts Word Origin for innardsC19: colloquial variant of inwards Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012 Words related to innardsinsides, guts, bowels, entrails, viscera, intestines, numbles |