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Synonyms

impale

American  
[im-peyl] / ɪmˈpeɪl /

verb (used with object)

impaled, impaling
  1. to fasten, stick, or fix upon a sharpened stake or the like.

  2. to pierce with a sharpened stake thrust up through the body, as for torture or punishment.

  3. to fix upon, or pierce through with, anything pointed.

  4. to make helpless as if pierced through.

  5. Archaic. to enclose with or as if with pales or stakes; fence in; hem in.

  6. Heraldry.

    1. to marshal (two coats of arms, as the family arms of a husband and wife) on an escutcheon party per pale.

    2. (of a coat of arms) to be combined with (another coat of arms) in this way.


impale British  
/ ɪmˈpeɪl /

verb

  1. to pierce with a sharp instrument

    they impaled his severed head on a spear

  2. archaic to enclose with pales or fencing; fence in

  3. heraldry to charge (a shield) with two coats of arms placed side by side

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Word Forms

  • impalement noun
  • impaler noun

Etymology

Origin of impale

1545–55; < Medieval Latin impālāre, equivalent to Latin im- im- 1 + pāl ( us ) pale 2 + -ā- thematic vowel + -re infinitive ending

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

In it, a girl runs barefoot through the snow in a filmy nightie, blood in her tracks, until she falls into a pit and is impaled by sharpened sticks.

From New York Times

The Goteborg District Court said Fatosh Ibrahim “on two occasions published photographs of severed heads impaled on the fence” of a Raqqa roundabout, placed there by Islamic State group militants.

From Washington Times

Injured people staggering out of what was left of their homes, impaled with debris.

From Washington Post

Some who attended reported accidental injuries including one person who was impaled by a log that pierced the floorboard of his vehicle and others suffered lacerations, dislocated fingers and broken bones, Doyle said.

From Seattle Times

Whether captured on the ground or in the air, they often met their end next to polenta or impaled on “the Brescian spit.”

From New York Times