Strangle with an iron collar.
Sinònims
Examples for "garrote"
Examples for "garrote"
1He cleared his throat as though to disembarrass it of a garrote.
2And the toggle on the garrote comes from Paddy's own duffel coat.
3They had dismounted the old man, and were about to garrote him.
4Isbar flailed and clawed at the garrote, but Gurney's grip remained firm.
5Attached to the e-mail was a photo of a bloodied garrote wire.
1Executed in Porto Rico by the terrible Spanish method of the garotte.
2A new machine has just arrived from Spain, called a garotte.
3Just get that on the windpipe-so ,(shewingme practically how to garotte).
4Tucker inspected his Uzi, then his knife and wire garotte.
5Immediately Judd stepped close behind the guard and dropped the garotte around his neck, yanking.
1Was this or was it not your last chance to escape the garrotte?'
2The Haitian tumbled over Bennet's shoulders -but Rene still wouldn't let go of the garrotte!
3Sley slid out without a smile, turning an oily rag in his hands like a garrotte.
4He once interrupted a day out with his daughter so that he could garrotte a man.
5The man slipped the garrotte over Tim's head.
A person who is unusually thin and scrawny.
The lean end of a neck of veal.
1The compatriot of Rachel was wrapping up a scrag of mutton.
2Now, perhaps you know somebody who is a scrag in society.
3Hunt for the spirit of the coming ruction and try to scrag it!
4No wan iver seed a scrag of her after that.
5And now I've done it, you want to scrag me.
6Orgasm over, his penis shrivels to a slimy scrag, and he stows it away.
7But this was just a scrag-end of turf -and a soggy one at that.
8Neck or scrag-end, used for cutlets, stews and meat-pies.
9The beard is all scrag, levelling out a good inch under the point of his chin.
10He surveyed me steadily for the scrag-end of a minute and then his left eyelid flickered.
11Again and again has my appetite been frustrated with an offer of mere sinew and scrag.
12Clarice was inwardly convinced that Vivian belonged to the scrag end, so far as character went.
13Neck, scrag-end used for stews, broth, meat-pies, etc.
14One can't scrag a man under his own roof, I suppose, though it's a sore temptation.
15Take one pound of the scrag end of the neck of veal and four quarts of water.
16These recipes must have emanated from Achill Island, where the mutton must be pretty much all scrag.