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Definitions

putrefy

[pyoo-truh-fahy] / ˈpju trəˌfaɪ /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

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By the Reagan era, the stasis was obvious; in the first two decades of the 21st century, it began to putrefy.

From Salon Apr. 19, 2026

A: Obviously, meat will putrefy and smell awful.

From Seattle Times Feb. 28, 2023

They attract rats, flies and other pests and tend to putrefy rather than break down, causing nasty smells, according to the Riverside County guide.

From Los Angeles Times Mar. 12, 2020

So anytime you encounter the term "putrefy" in a description of the digestive process, file it away under "scare tactic" rather than "scientific fact."

From US News May 12, 2015

After several weeks, their skin began to putrefy and flake off.

From "Escape from Camp 14: One Man's Remarkable Odyssey from North Korea to Freedom in the West" by Blaine Harden

Aristotle described them as “exceedingly fond of putrefied flesh.”

From National Geographic Feb. 8, 2024

Mules killed in the assault putrefied and attracted swarms of maggots.

From New York Times Jan. 12, 2024

Other off-the-shelf fixes discourage pests by creating a “nasal irritation” or have an offensive taste with ingredients such as putrefied egg solids, garlic oil and hot pepper.

From Seattle Times May 20, 2023

As a result, laboratory studies relied on putrefied tissue samples obtained from dead pupfish collected by National Park Service staff.

From Los Angeles Times May 4, 2022

The bad coffee was dumped on Ball’s Wharf, where it putrefied in the sun and sent out a powerful odor that could be smelled over a quarter mile away.

From "An American Plague: The True and Terrifying Story of the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793" by Jim Murphy

One of his earliest patients was a man already in the black “sphacelus” stage, the limb putrefying while still attached.

From The Wall Street Journal Feb. 6, 2026

He must now go behind the crematorium, to the edge of the Ganges—a “dark slurry of putrefying matter”—and throw his mother’s remains in.

From The New Yorker Mar. 14, 2016

The author unashamedly falls in love with Patience Darton, a tall, beautiful, brave and rebellious English nurse who managed every day to find beauty amid putrefying wounds and floors sticky with blood.

From Washington Post Feb. 5, 2015

Widowed young, she joins the would-be exodus to Europe from a seaside town of crumbling mansions that smells of putrefying fish.

From The Guardian Jul. 6, 2012

“She fired Mr. Schroeder?” he said, sounding stunned, like his whole world was putrefying faster than the curdled chocolate milk he’d almost just drunk.

From "The Smartest Kid in the Universe" by Chris Grabenstein




Vocabulary lists containing putrefy


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