PIERCED vs PERFORATE: ADJECTIVE
- Penetrated; entered; perforated.
- Having a hole cut through
- Of or relating to a piece of jewelry designed to be worn in a such a body part.
- Of or relating to a body part that has been perforated for the purpose of attaching a piece of jewelry.
- Cut through with a sharp instrument; perforated.
- Pierced with a hole or holes, or with pores; having transparent dots resembling holes.
- Having been perforated.
- Perforated.
- Having a hole cut through
PIERCED vs PERFORATE: VERB
- Simple past tense and past participle of pierce.
- Pass into or through, often by overcoming resistance
- Make a hole into or between, as for ease of separation
- To pierce; to penetrate.
- To make a line of holes in a thin material to allow separation at the line.
PIERCED vs PERFORATE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To pierce, punch, or bore a hole or holes in; penetrate.
- To pierce or stamp with rows of holes, as those between postage stamps, to allow easy separation.
- To pass into or through something.
PIERCED vs PERFORATE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To bore through; to pierce through with a pointed instrument; to make a hole or holes through by boring or piercing; to pierce or penetrate the surface of.
PIERCED vs PERFORATE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Having an arrow, spear, or other weapon thrust into it but not passing through, as an animal used as a bearing. Compare transfixed.
- Cut through with an opening not so large as that implied in cleché, and not of the shape of the bearing.
- In heraldry:
- Penetrated; entered by force; perforated.
- To bore through; pierce; make a hole or holes in, as by boring or driving.
- Synonyms Bore through, Pierce, etc. See penetrate.
- Bored or pierced through: penetrated.
- Specifically— In botany, pierced with one or more small holes, or, more commonly, having translucent dots which resemble holes, as in most plants of the order Hypericineæ.
- In ornithology, noting the nostril of a bird when lacking a nasal septum, so that a hole appears from side to side of the bill, as in the turkey-buzzard, crane, etc.
- In anatomy, open; opened through; affording passage or communication; having the character or quality of a perforation; forminate
- In zoology, full of little holes or perforations; cribrose; foraminulate; specifically, of or pertaining to the Perforata: as, a perforate coral; a perforate foraminifer.
- Of the shells of gastropod mollusks, having a tubular cavity extending through the columella from the umbilicus to the apex: contrasted with imperforate, in which case the columella is solid.
PIERCED vs PERFORATE: RELATED WORDS
- Earlobes, Navels, Drilled, Slashed, Cracked, Breached, Crossed, Broken, Tore, Punched, Penetrated, Cut, Perforate, Perforated, Punctured
- Perforation gauge, Distend, Pertuse, Sidetrack, Cribrous, Dewater, Drill, Terebrate, Extrude, Countersink, Coarsely, Punch, Cut, Punctured, Pierced
PIERCED vs PERFORATE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Bored, Died, Surpassed, Drilled, Slashed, Cracked, Breached, Crossed, Broken, Tore, Punched, Cut, Perforate, Perforated, Punctured
- Pouncet box, Intubate, Perforation gauge, Distend, Pertuse, Cribrous, Dewater, Terebrate, Extrude, Countersink, Coarsely, Punch, Cut, Punctured, Pierced
PIERCED vs PERFORATE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Fill up your pierced hole with dew drops.
- VERY pierced at punk or goth stores, though.
- John Stamos and I got our ears pierced.
- Remembering how his eyes had pierced through her.
- Just as Jesus was pierced by a lance, so Thomas was pierced by a sword.
- Belly buttons change in shape and size during and after pregnancy the pierced ring out of the pierced area rotate.
- Body piercings likewise have taken on new meaning within the Christian community as a reminder to the pierced that Christ was pierced for them.
- Dress Code policy is of a limited nature: it does not prohibit all pierced jewelry but merely limits pierced jewelry to the ear.
- Regarding piercing as long does belly pierced the places get your bellybutton pierced without parental consent from tattooing take a body piercing.
- Pierced by a thorn or dart, pierced; thorny; troublesome.
- The spinal or epidural needle may perforate the dura with no involvement of the arachnoid.
- Be careful not to perforate any of the organs, especially the stomach and intestines, which are particularly noisome.
- Ingested sharp objects perforate the reticulum and cause infection of the heart sac, lungs, or abdominal cavity.
- If you are having a printer do your cards, make sure they perforate them for you.
- An untreated severe tooth abscess may become large enough to perforate bone and extend into the soft tissue.
- Defective IVC filters may migrate, break apart, and perforate veins and organs.
- The affected bowel may perforate or the condition resolve with stricture formation.
- Never did such portentous shot holes perforate the carcass of any quarry.
- IUD, they can migrate in the body and even perforate your uterus.
- We then perforate the paper to create Pegboard Skinz.
PIERCED vs PERFORATE: QUESTIONS
- Can you wear sterling silver earrings with pierced ears?
- Can you get your ears pierced at Selfridges London?
- What is the process of getting your tongue pierced?
- Can the apadravya be pierced with a different length?
- Should I take my earrings out after getting pierced?
- How to remove a pierced earring without removing it?
- How did Thomas know that Jesus' hands were pierced?
- Where to get stretched earlobes pierced in Singapore?
- Can getting your Daith pierced help with headaches?
- Is it safe to have your belly button pierced Or pierced?
- Can a gunshot wound to the head perforate the head?
- Can a pacemaker lead perforate beyond 24 hours after deployment?
- What is the maximum sheet size that graepels can perforate?
- How many such pairs are there in the word'perforate'?
- What happens if you perforate or lacerate a stingray?
- What kind of ammunition can perforate steel plates?