emaciate|emaciated|emaciates|emaciating in English
verb
[e·ma·ci·ate || ɪ'meɪʃɪeɪt]
make lean, make thin; become lean, become thi
Use "emaciate|emaciated|emaciates|emaciating" in a sentence
1. 13 Everyone in London looks pale, delicate and emaciated or suntanned and emaciated.
2. 16 To cause to become lean, usually by starvation; emaciate.
3. 18 Everyone in London looks pale, delicate and emaciated or suntanned and emaciated.
4. They were alive but emaciated and traumatized.
5. Children with marasmus are simply emaciated.
6. 5 His emaciated body shivered uncontrollably.
7. 13 His emaciated body shivered uncontrollably.
8. 5 He was emaciated and half his weight.
9. Cattle were emaciated, under nourished and in poor condition.
10. 22 He was emaciated by long illness.
11. A long illness had emaciated the invalid.
12. See his emaciated frame and bloated belly.
13. 1 The prisoners were ill and emaciated.
14. 7 He was emaciated and half his weight.
15. 3 A long illness had emaciated the invalid.
16. 2 A long illness had emaciated my father.
17. 21 Emaciated indicates a serious condition resulting from starvation.
18. A long time illness made him sallow and emaciated.
19. Revendreth critters: /way 39,0, 49,3 Emaciated Bat (flying) /way 70,9, 76,5 Shardling? Creeper Macro /target: /tar Emaciated Bat /tar Shardling /tar Creeper Video location: ?
20. Emaciated, wild eyed rats darted about fitfully in a small cage.
21. crowbait (plural Crowbaits) (US, often attributive) An old, emaciated horse.
22. 6 Cattle were emaciated, under nourished and in poor condition.
23. 8 With my wallet dangerously emaciated, I called GolfDigest, looking for work.
24. That bill was like soup made from the bones of an emaciated chicken.
25. 4 There were pictures of emaciated children on the cover of the magazine.