jugulated — ju·gu·late || dÊ’ÊŒjÉ™leɪt / jÊŠleɪt v. cut the throat of … English contemporary dictionary
Jugulate — Ju gu*late, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Jugulated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Jugulating}.] [L. jugulatus, p. p. of jugulare, fr. jugulatum. See {Jugular}.] To cut the throat of. [R.] Jacob Bigelow. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Jugulating — Jugulate Ju gu*late, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Jugulated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Jugulating}.] [L. jugulatus, p. p. of jugulare, fr. jugulatum. See {Jugular}.] To cut the throat of. [R.] Jacob Bigelow. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
jugulate — jugulation, n. /jooh gyeuh layt , jug yeuh /, v.t., jugulated, jugulating. 1. to check or suppress (disease) by extreme measures. 2. to cut the throat of; kill. [1615 25; < L jugulatus (ptp. of jugulare to cut the throat of), equiv. to jugul(um)… … Universalium
jugulate — /ˈdʒʌgjuleɪt/ (say jugyoohlayt) verb (t) (jugulated, jugulating) 1. to check or suppress (disease, etc.) by extreme measures. 2. to cut the throat of; kill. 3. to strangle. {Latin jugulātus, past participle, slain} –jugulation /dʒʌgjuˈleɪʃən/… …
jugulate — [jo͞o′gyo͞o lāt΄, jo͞o′gyəlāt΄] vt. jugulated, jugulating [L jugulatus, pp. of jugulare < jugulum: see JUGULAR] 1. Now Rare to kill by cutting the throat 2. Med. to use extreme measures in arresting (a disease) … English World dictionary