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- Dictionarymassacre/ˈmasəkə/
noun
- 1. an indiscriminate and brutal slaughter of many people: "the attack was described as a cold-blooded massacre" Similar
verb
- 1. deliberately and brutally kill (many people): "thousands were brutally massacred by soldiers" Similar
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an act of killing a lot of people: He ordered the massacre of 2,000 women and children. informal. a bad defeat, especially in sport: The manager resigned after the team's 7–2 massacre in the final. Fewer examples. Of course, she was using the term 'massacre' in the figurative sense. The massacre was a crime against humanity.
The meaning of MASSACRE is the act or an instance of killing a number of usually helpless or unresisting human beings under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty. How to use massacre in a sentence.
the unnecessary, indiscriminate killing of a large number of human beings or animals, as in barbarous warfare or persecution or for revenge or plunder. Synonyms: extermination, genocide, butchery, carnage. a general slaughter, as of persons or animals: the massacre of millions during the war. Synonyms: extermination, genocide, butchery, carnage.
Le Massacre de Scio ("The Chios massacre") a painting (1824) by Eugène Delacroix depicting the massacre of Greeks on the island of Chios by Ottoman troops during the Greek War of Independence in 1822. A massacre is an event of killing people who are not engaged in hostilities or are defenseless. [1]
A massacre is the killing of a large number of people at the same time in a violent and cruel way. Maria lost her 62-year-old mother in the massacre. ...reports of massacre, torture and starvation.
noun. /ˈmæsəkə (r)/ /ˈmæsəkər/ [countable, uncountable] the killing of a large number of people especially in a cruel way. the bloody massacre of innocent civilians. Nobody survived the massacre. Extra Examples. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Take your English to the next level.
A massacre is a big bloody mess of killing, and usually for no good reason. Not that there’s ever a good reason for killing, but massacres are especially pointless and gory. It’s unclear where the word massacre came from, but possibly it was the Old French word macacre, which means “slaughterhouse.”