Carrion in a sentence as a noun

Perhaps he packs a lot of data in his carrion luggage.

In the three cases you've mentioned, the banned flesh is from animals that are carrion eating scavengers.

Given that many soaring birds have fantastic eyes to find prey or carrion, they might be able to see it.

That's why it matters - without a hunger for knowledge, our species would still be living in caves, pilfering scraps of flesh from carrion.

Out tramping in the early 30s, he falls in with "a little Liverpool Jew, a thorough guttersnipe" with a face that recalls "some low-down carrion bird".

Because lord knows CoD software developers aren't actually people, but a bunch of gore-thirsty carrion vultures.

Any carrion, the carcase of a dead dog or cat, for example, though half putrid and stinking, is as welcome to them as the most wholesome food to the people of other countries.

Intellectual Vultures claim they invest in invention when in actuality they are simply scavenging on the carrion of inventors.

Specifically, carrion crows show a neuronal response in the palliative end brain during the performance of a task that correlates with their perception of a stimulus.

If you write Ruby and go to a SFRuby Meetup, you will learn quickly that even if you are looking for work it is quite annoying to say you are looking for work, as the recruiters swarm in like vultures to fresh carrion.

12 But these are the ones that you shall not eat: the eagle,[b] the bearded vulture, the black vulture, 13 the kite, the falcon of any kind; 14 every raven of any kind; 15 the ostrich, the nighthawk, the sea gull, the hawk of any kind; 16 the little owl and the short-eared owl, the barn owl 17 and the tawny owl, the carrion vulture and the cormorant, 18 the stork, the heron of any kind; the hoopoe and the bat. 19 And all winged insects are unclean for you; they shall not be eaten.

Carrion definitions

noun

the dead and rotting body of an animal; unfit for human food