Carrion [noun]
Definition of Carrion:
decaying flesh
Opposite/Antonyms of Carrion:
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Sentence/Example of Carrion:
The carcass then attracts other creatures like carrion birds, which can also get hit, creating a miserable cycle of wildlife death.
There are poets and writers who see naught in war but carrion, filth, savagery and horror.
As he advanced, three crows flew, coming from some carrion spoil they had found within.
Over in the field a flock of crows and kites were wheeling,—some carrion,—but Mary did not go near.
But there poured upon him an overpowering smell of carrion; putrefying lambs, chamois, and birds lay here torn to pieces.
On the extreme summit of a feather-pine, the carrion crows croaked and rocked in the soft breeze.
What, when there is a printed order from the government stuck over the whole mine that nobody is to leave carrion about!
Dare not say it is, or I will, upon the spot, divorce your pettifogging soul from your carrion carcass!
Besides the carrion vulture, condors collect in great numbers on the shore to prey on the stranded whales.
The few survivors fed upon weeds and carrion, robbing the graves and gibbets of their dead.