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Definition of impale verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

impale

verb
 
/ɪmˈpeɪl/
 
/ɪmˈpeɪl/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they impale
 
/ɪmˈpeɪl/
 
/ɪmˈpeɪl/
he / she / it impales
 
/ɪmˈpeɪlz/
 
/ɪmˈpeɪlz/
past simple impaled
 
/ɪmˈpeɪld/
 
/ɪmˈpeɪld/
past participle impaled
 
/ɪmˈpeɪld/
 
/ɪmˈpeɪld/
-ing form impaling
 
/ɪmˈpeɪlɪŋ/
 
/ɪmˈpeɪlɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. impale something (on something) to push a sharp pointed object through something synonym spear
    • She impaled a lump of meat on her fork.
  2. impale somebody/yourself on something if you impale yourself on something, or are impaled on it, you have a sharp pointed object pushed into you and you may be caught somewhere by it
    • He had fallen and been impaled on some iron railings.
  3. Word Originmid 16th cent. (in the sense ‘enclose with stakes’): from French empaler or medieval Latin impalare, from Latin in- ‘in’ + palus ‘a stake’.
See impale in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
previously
adverb
 
 
From the Word list
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B1
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