0 past simple and past participle of lacerate
1 to cut or tear something, especially flesh:
The first place lacerated so tender a skin.
Her cervix had become badly lacerated.
As a result, many people worked with lacerated fingers, possibly working in suds and oil.
Her feelings were being lacerated and yet it was necessary that every detail should be given.
Another man who came un was lacerated and bleeding.
No one who has seen pictures of animals whose bodies have been mangled and lacerated by snares can be indifferent to such cruelty.
I can remember working in a factory before the war when a man with a lacerated finger would stay at his machine.
With the older type of laminated glass there was a danger of being thrown through the windscreen and severely lacerated.