entrail

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Etymology 1 === From en- +‎ trail. ==== Verb ==== entrail (third-person singular simple present entrails, present participle entrailing, simple past and past participle entrailed) (archaic) To interweave or bind. 1598, William Cecil, letter to his son, reprinted in Annals of the reformation and establishment of religion[2], 1824, by John Strype, page 479, Trust not any with thy life, credit, or estate: for it is mere folly for a man to entrail himself to his friend; as though, occasion being offered, he shall not dare to become his enemy. (heraldry) To outline in black. A cross entrailed. === Etymology 2 === From Middle English entraille, from Old French entraille (compare modern French entrailles), from Late Latin intrālia, modification of Latin intrānea, contraction of interāneum (“gut, intestine”), substantive of interāneus (“internal, inward”). ==== Pronunciation ==== IPA(key): /ˈɛn.tɹeɪl/, /ˈɛn.tɹəl/ ==== Noun ==== entrail (plural entrails) (usually used in the plural) singular of entrails; an internal organ of an animal. (archaic) Entanglement; fold. ===== Synonyms ===== innard, gut, tharm, intestine ===== Derived terms ===== ===== Translations ===== === Anagrams === ratline, inter al., art line, -traline, Latiner, line art, trenail, trainel, larnite, reliant, latrine, retinal