Extreme leanness (usually caused by starvation or disease)
Sinònims
Examples for "emaciation"
Examples for "emaciation"
1His body was thin and fine and tight, with a healthy emaciation.
2She's thin almost to the point of emaciation, and pale as milk.
3Even in her waxy whiteness and unnatural emaciation, her face was good.
4This man appeared in tolerable health as to body, his emaciation excepted.
5Hard to tell, due to his bruises and emaciation under the rags.
1We obtained them in enormous abundance in a maceration of fish.
2For the production of the huile and pomade they are treated by maceration.
3A sinful mortal like thyself; but worn down with long vigils and maceration.
4This fleshly maceration is the symbolic preparation for the conversion he subsequently undergoes.
5They are treated by maceration and enfleurage, chiefly the latter.
1Spider's arms, impossibly strong for their gauntness, cradled her against his chest.
2His features, always inclined to gauntness, became even sharper and more pronounced.
3The gauntness, she knew, was a side effect of cold sleep.
4He had lost weight, and his cheekbones stuck out with gauntness.
5It showed a woman of mournfully beautiful gauntness, jacket draped over her shoulder.
1The doctor felt the boniness of his own face and hands.
2They were an odd couple: Brutish, fat and carnal, Poor, a stick figure-thoughsturdy in her boniness-constantlygrubbing, ever fearful.
3"The food, my lord?" persisted the unlovely boniness that was Marilla Theron.
4"You needn't worry over my boniness," she assured him cheerfully.