1. Tuerie, carnage.
2. Il s'emploie plutôt en parlant d'un grand nombre de gens qu'on tue sans qu'ils puissent se défendent. Le massacre de la Saint-Barthélemy.
3. Par ext. exécution lamentable d'une pièce de théâtre, d'une oeuvre musicale. Hier, représentation d'Hamlet au théâtre X. : un vrai massacre !
Indiscriminate slaughter; SYN. bloodletting, bloodshed, battue. blood-bath, blood bath
ETYM French carnage, Late Lat. carnaticum tribute of animals, flesh of animals, from Latin caro, carnis, flesh. Related to Carnal.
1. Great destruction of life, as in battle; bloodshed; slaughter; massacre; murder; havoc.
2. Flesh of slain animals or men.
ETYM French, from Late Lat. mazacrium; cf. Prov. German metzgern, metzgen, to kill cattle, German metzger a butcher, and LG. matsken to cut, hew, Old High Germ. meizan to cut, Goth. máitan.
The wanton killing of many people; SYN. mass murder.
ETYM Old Eng. slautir, slaughter, slaghter, Icel. slâtr slain flesh, modified by Old Eng. slaught, slaht, slaughter, from as. sleaht a stroke, blow; both from the root of Eng. slay. Related to Slay, Onslaught.
1. The killing of animals (as for food).
2. The savage and excessive killing of people; SYN. carnage, butchery.