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From: prd@pauldormer.cix.co.uk (Paul Dormer)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.fandom
Subject: Re: MT VOID, 06/21/24 -- Vol. 42, No. 51, Whole Number 2333
Date: Sun, 23 Jun 2024 16:28 +0100 (BST)
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In article <v599nd$cbov$1@dont-email.me>, evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com
(Evelyn C. Leeper) wrote:

> I have no idea where Irby found the word "dilacerated".

From a dictionary?  It's in the latest edition of Chambers: dilacerate
/di-las'?r-at/ transitive verb To rend or tear asunder
ORIGIN: L di- asunder, and lacerate

Though saying it's in Chambers doesn't mean it's a common word found in
the general vocabulary.  Chambers is the recommended dictionary for the
Azed crossword in The Observer, a Sunday paper.  The answers to last
week's puzzle have just been published.  Included were: CUSK, another
name for the torsk; STROOKE, an archaic form of strike; and HOGH,
Spenser's spelling of hoe, a promontory.