- un|ex|pur|gat|ed
- un|ex|pur|gat|ed «uhn EHKS puhr GAY tihd», adjective.not expurgated.
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
un·ex·pur·gat·ed — /ˌʌnˈɛkspɚˌgeıtəd/ adj formal of a book, play, etc. : with all the parts that might offend people still included She had read an unexpurgated version of the text … Useful english dictionary
Emmanuel Gat — Emanuel Gat Emanuel Gat, né Emanuel Edery[1] en 1969 à Hadera en Israël, est un chorégraphe israëlien de danse contemporaine. Sommaire 1 Biographie 2 Principales chorégraphies … Wikipédia en Français
Emanuel Gat — Naissance 1969 Hadera en Israël Activité principale Chorégraphe, danseur Style Danse contemporaine Lieux d activité Istres en France Années d activité … Wikipédia en Français
ex|pur|gate — «EHKS puhr gayt», transitive verb, gat|ed, gat|ing. to remove objectionable passages or words from (a book, play, film, letter, or the like); purify. ╂[< Latin expūrgāre (with English … Useful english dictionary
expurgated — ex|pur|gat|ed [ ekspər,geıtəd ] adjective published after someone has removed parts they consider inappropriate or offensive: the expurgated version of the text ─ opposite UNEXPURGATED ╾ ex|pur|gate verb transitive ╾ ex|pur|ga|tion [ ,ekspər… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
expurgated — ex|pur|gat|ed [ˈekspəgeıtıd US ər ] adj [Date: 1600 1700; : Latin; Origin: , past participle of expurgare, from purgare; PURGE1] an expurgated book, play etc has had some parts removed because they are considered harmful or offensive ▪ an… … Dictionary of contemporary English
unexpurgated — un|ex|pur|gat|ed [ʌnˈekspəgeıtıd US pər ] adj an unexpurgated book, play etc is complete and has not had parts that might offend people removed … Dictionary of contemporary English
unexpurgated — un|ex|pur|gat|ed [ ʌn ekspər,geıtəd ] adjective FORMAL without any offensive words or images being removed … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
unexpurgated — un•ex′pur•gat ed adj … From formal English to slang
expurgate — ex•pur•gate [[t]ˈɛk spərˌgeɪt[/t]] v. t. gat•ed, gat•ing 1) to amend by removing words deemed objectionable 2) to purge of something morally offensive • Etymology: 1615–25; < L expurgātus, ptp. of expurgāre to cleanse, clear away ex… … From formal English to slang