|
STABBED |
Pierced |
|
LANCED |
Pierced |
|
SPEARED |
Pierced |
|
EARLOBE |
Oft-pierced body part |
|
|
EAR |
Oft-pierced body part |
|
SKEWERED |
Pierced with long pin |
|
RIDDLED |
Pierced with many holes |
|
UNGORED |
Not gored or pierced. |
|
|
PERTUSATE |
Pierced at the apex. |
|
PIERCEABLE |
That may be pierced. |
|
PUNCTURED |
Cut, pruned, chopped and pierced |
|
PERTUSED |
Punched; pierced with, or having, holes. |
|
IMPIERCEABLE |
Not capable of being pierced; impenetrable. |
|
CORNCOB |
Ear to be pierced with a fork, perhaps |
|
DEAFENING |
Kind of noise heard by those having their ears pierced? |
|
SPITTED |
Put upon a spit; pierced as if by a spit. |
|
PENETRABLE |
Capable of being penetrated, entered, or pierced. Used
also figuratively. |
|
PINKED |
Pierced with small holes; worked in eyelets; scalloped on
the edge. |
|
TRANSFIXION |
The act of transfixing, or the state of being
transfixed, or pierced. |
|
PENETRABILITY |
The quality of being penetrable; susceptibility of
being penetrated, entered, or pierced. |
|
PERFORATED |
Pierced with a hole or holes, or with pores; having
transparent dots resembling holes. |
|
LEADER |
A block of hard wood pierced with suitable holes for
leading ropes in their proper places. |
|
ANTEFIX |
An ornament of the cymatium of a classic cornice,
sometimes pierced for the escape of water. |
|
TAP |
A plug or spile for stopping a hole pierced in a cask, or the
like; a faucet. |
|
TOOTH |
A projecting member resembling a tenon, but fitting into a
mortise that is only sunk, not pierced through. |