Viscera in a sentence as a noun

There are no course corrections that don't involve big splotches of blood and viscera.

I used to think mostly in English, but nowadays I think in, well, viscera.

"They all went from falling apart, having their viscera hanging out, to pretty healthy in a day," she says.

My viscera was wrongHopwood:> I wouldnt say that your sentencing instincts suck.

Not to mention the yummy idea to earn lots of money speculating with the "tigercoin viscera market".

If you asked someone who had been reading the Iliad, they'd be able to tell you all kinds of words for spears, fighting, armor, walls, and viscera, but rain might not come up as frequently.

They would already be cleaned of feathers or pelt and emptied of viscera, so it would be a simple exercise of cutting into pieces, separating meat from bones, and so on - literal hacking.

Rewiring for a whole limb or body, to say nothing of all the viscera, I really just don't see happening without some kind of massive assistance on a nano level, stuff that's sci-fi for now.

Damasio's theory stresses 'the crucial role of feeling in navigating the endless stream of life's personal decisions....The intuitive signals that guide us in these moments come in the form of limbic-driven surges from the viscera that Damasio calls "somatic markers" - literally, gut feelings'.

Viscera definitions

noun

internal organs collectively (especially those in the abdominal cavity); "`viscera' is the plural form of `viscus'"

See also: entrails innards