0 past simple and past participle of eviscerate
1 to remove one or all of the organs from the inside of a body
The fish were eviscerated in situ and the digestive tracts placed in physiological saline and immediately transported to the laboratory, where they were processed.
The alimentary canal was then removed for further examination and the eviscerated body weight of each animal was recorded.
The conger eels were caught by hook and immediately eviscerated in situ.
Fish were then dissected and eviscerated, the internal surfaces and oral cavity being rinsed with saline.
Simply drying the fish after having been eviscerated and scaled is one method, but if there is high atmospheric humidity the flesh will still decompose.
Salmonellae were isolated from these birds in the same general proportions as isolations obtained in earlier studies from frozen poultry eviscerated in packing plants.
It has been eviscerated, and it is of no use for the purpose for which, at great expenditure of capital, it was carefully equipped.
Yes; the virus of fowl pest has been recovered from scrapings of the skins of frozen eviscerated carcases of poultry brought from abroad.