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(IN-yoo-ate-ed) deformed, mutilated.
Also used to describe a person who is sick or sore.
Often used with the modifier "all".
1)The quiche looked fine until it was dropped on the floor, making it all inuated.
2)Yesterday he fell off his bike, so today he is all inuated, or maybe just his leg is inuated.
3)"How are you feeling?"
"I have the Flu; I'm all inuated."
inuated by info@kathrinepiper.com August 25, 2006
Related Words
(IN-yoo-ate-ed) deformed, mutilated
The quiche looked fine until it was dropped on the floor, making it inuated.
inuated by www.kathrinepiper.com August 21, 2006
to express indirectly, in a way subtly less guileful than by insinuation
Mimi neither quite implied nor quite insinuated that the house down the street was in fact a crack den—rather, she inuated this.
Inuate by Eric Hague December 22, 2008