eventerate means to rip open; to disembowel. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 88 out of 100.
Why “eventerate” is a great word
EVENTERATE — [Verb] To rip open, especially to disembowel. A 17th-century English formation, likely a relatinized calque of French éventrer, from Latin ē- ("out") + venter ("belly") + the English verb-forming suffix -ate. Unlike "disembowel," which specifies the removal of entrails, or "eviscerate," a more clinical term for organ removal, to eventerate is to enact the violent, initial breach of the cavity itself. It is the butcher’s crude tear into a carcass, the predator’s claw rending the soft underbelly, the grim promise of a battlefield dagger—a word that dwells on the terrible, opening instant of violation, on the wound more than what is lost.
Etymology
Likely a "relatinized" calque of French éventrer, from Latin ē(x)- (“out”) + Latin venter (“belly”, ventr- in compounds) + -ate (verb-forming suffix); this should have given *eventrate, compare its obsolete doublet eventrate and orienate.
verb
- To rip open; to disembowel.