bowels
11bowels — sb. Pol. S. 213. Alys. 4668. For the etymology of this word, see Phil. Soc. Trans. for 1856, p. 36 …
12bowels — bow·els || baÊŠÉ™lz n. intestines, entrails; deepest interior parts of something …
13bowels — elbows …
14bowels — the intestine. → bowel …
15bowels — n. pl. 1. Intestines, entrails, viscera, inwards, guts. 2. Inside, interior, interior parts, midst. 3. Compassion, pity, tenderness, mercy, mercifulness, feeling, fellow feeling, sympathy …
16bowels — noun the center of the Earth • Hypernyms: ↑center, ↑centre, ↑midpoint …
17bowels of the earth — the center of the earth, deep beneath the earth s surface …
18open your bowels — to defecate A bowel is literally an intestine, whence any internal organ, and was so used by Cromwell: The enemy in all probability will be in our bowels in ten days. (Letter, 1643) Now medical jargon: Have you had your bowels… …
19get one’s bowels in an uproar — tv. to become overly anxious or excited. □ Cool it! Don t get your bowels in an uproar. □ Fred’s always getting his bowels in an uproar about nothing …
20(the) bowels of something — the bowels of something phrase the deepest inner part of something a mineshaft that descends into the bowels of the earth Thesaurus: words used to describe depthhyponym high and heightsynonym Main entry: bowel …