0 past simple and past participle of eviscerate
1 to remove one or all of the organs from the inside of a body
I have caused my remarks on the last amendment to be somewhat eviscerated in order to leave room for that grace note.
Several supermarkets chains now sell poultry that has been eviscerated under hygienic conditions in a poultry plant rather than a butcher's shop.
There is an increasing availability of fresh, unfrozen and eviscerated poultry to replace the traditional uneviscerated bird.
The meat inspectors inspect the cattle after they have been eviscerated.
But the clause has been eviscerated and looks like a colander.
Let us take the subject of eviscerated chicken, for example.
The amended regulations show quite clearly that eviscerated chickens can be a derogation up to 1981 and no further.
Yes; the virus of fowl pest has been recovered from scrapings of the skins of frozen eviscerated carcases of poultry brought from abroad.