Macerate in a sentence as a verb

> she really wanted to macerate a bat, to see how its wing looked on the inside.

Fakes found to be macerated or burned - or other form of true destruction.

If you wanted to get data though it would be easy to macerate the stool to collect samples surely.

Yes, and the relative merits of well defined substances versus macerated hot water plant extracts will be discussed to the end of time.

I do wonder, with the ridiculous popularity of the InstantPot, when we'll see a post somewhere about how to use it to macerate a dead animal.

How about:Most patients, even if they bother to get the minty-waxed out the box, are exceptionally heavy-handed and macerate their gums like they’ve been chewing on bare vacuum cleaner flex.

It's not able to break down the food and get at its contents quite as efficiently when the food hasn't been mechanically ground up or macerated first, and your teeth are unlikely to grind it up quite so finely.

Of the recipes that I read, cherry brandy is the easiest by far — you macerate several pitted cherries in a jar for several days — and not alien at all to a contemporary reader with an interest in these things.

Macerate definitions

verb

separate into constituents by soaking

verb

become soft or separate and disintegrate as a result of excessive soaking; "the tissue macerated in the water"

verb

soften, usually by steeping in liquid, and cause to disintegrate as a result; "macerate peaches"; "the gizzards macerates the food in the digestive system"

verb

cause to grow thin or weak; "The treatment emaciated him"

See also: waste emaciate