gangrened
English
editEtymology
editVerb
editgangrened
- simple past and past participle of gangrene
Adjective
editgangrened (comparative more gangrened, superlative most gangrened)
- Infected with gangrene; gangrenous.
- 1808, John Dryden, The Works Of John Dryden, Vol. 7 (of 18)[1]:
- Yes, when the offender can be judged by laws: But when his greatness overturns the scales, Then kings are justice in the last appeal, And, forced by strong necessity, may strike; In which, indeed, they assert the public good, And, like sworn surgeons, lop the gangrened limb: Unpleasant, wholesome, work.
- 1888, Fannie A. (Mrs.) Beers, Memories[2]:
- Here were rooms crowded with uncomfortable-looking beds, on which lay men whose gangrened wounds gave forth foul odors, which, mingled with the terrible effluvia from the mouths of patients ill of scurvy, sent a shuddering sickness through my frame.
- 1906, Marie Hay, A German Pompadour[3]:
- In vain he protested and claimed the protection of Louis XIV. The King at Versailles was busied with the saving of his soul and with the doctoring of his gangrened knee.
- Corrupt; degenerate.
- 1838, John Leifchild, Dr. Redford, The Evangelist, page 129:
- How different a representation is this from the prejudice and passion of Gangræna Edwards himself, more gangrened than any of his unhappy sectaries.
- 1908, Marguerite Cunliffe-Owen, The Cradle of the Rose, page 42:
- The army was daily becoming more gangrened by a wilful admixture of accredited and duly subventioned agents, who boasted the title of "Franc-Macons de la Solidarite/ Militaire," and who, forming a loathsome association, ceaselessly spied upon their brother officers, and reported to high quarters upon their religious and political opinions.
- 1957, Sydney Seymour Biro, The German Policy of Revolutionary France:
- To give the Commission a list of gangrened members — as he had been directed to do — he would have to include the first and last senators, and all between.