Definition of Slaughterer. Meaning of Slaughterer. Synonyms of Slaughterer

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Slaughterer. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Slaughterer and, of course, Slaughterer synonyms and on the right images related to the word Slaughterer.

Definition of Slaughterer

Slaughterer
Slaughterer Slaugh"ter*er, n. One who slaughters.

Meaning of Slaughterer from wikipedia

- Look up slaughterer in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Slaughterer may refer to: One who works in a slaughterhouse Shochet (lit. "slaughterer"), in Judaism...
- Look up Slaughter or slaughter in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Slaughter may refer to: Animal slaughter, the killing of animals for various purposes...
- The Slaughter is the debut studio album by the American groove metal band Incite. It was released in 2009 on I Scream Music. "Intro" - 0:57 "The Slaughter"...
- The Slaughters may refer to: a family of poachers in Captain Planet and the Planeteers Upper Slaughter and Lower Slaughter, collectively Slaughters This...
- Dorothy Louise Slaughter (née McIntosh, August 14, 1929 – March 16, 2018) was an American politician elected to 16 terms as a United States Representative...
- Slaughter of the Innocents may refer to: Slaughter of the Innocents (film), a 1993 thriller film M****acre of the Innocents, a biblical account of infanticide...
- Richard Slaughter is a scholar and writer in the field of ****ures studies, applied foresight and social innovation. He is the co-director of Foresight...
- Mark Allen Slaughter (born July 4, 1964) is an American singer and musician, and one of the founders of the glam metal band Slaughter. Slaughter was born...
- Slaughter tapping is an obsolete method of extracting large quantities of natural latex from rubber trees in a forest environment. Before commercial exploitation...
- A slaughter offering in the Hebrew Bible (Hebrew: זֶבַח, romanized: zeḇaḥ) is a type of Jewish animal sacrifice. The term specifically refers to the slaughter...