Reverse Dictionary: WOUND

ADJECTIVES
1438 ► CUTTED wounded, mutilated, etc. by cutting; castrate; carved, sculptured, engraved → obs. exc. Eng. dial.
1509 ► SAUCIATE wounded, hurt → obs.
1660 ► RANCOROUS of a wound or sore: festering, inflamed, full of corruption, suppurating → obs.
1808 ► ELDRITCH of a sore or wound: painful, fretted → Sc. obs.
1884 ► ANGRY of a wound or sore: inflamed, red → Eng. & Amer. dial.
1911 ► BONNY of a wound: healthy → Sc. (Bk.)
1915 ► CLICKED IT got killed; was wounded → World War I Amer. sl.
1942 ► LEAD POISONED wounded by a bullet → Amer. sl. (Bk.)
1942 ► PIPPED wounded by a bullet → Amer. sl. (Bk.)
1942 ► WINGED slightly wounded → Amer. sl. (Bk.)


NOUNS
1000 ► CARF cutting, a cut, an incision; a wound → obs. exc. Eng. dial.
1297 ► QUITTER → QUITTOR pus; suppurating matter; a purulent discharge from a wound or sore → obs.
1384 ► RUNNING a sore or wound that discharges pus → obs.
1420 ► LESURE hurt, injury, wound → obs.
1500 ► GAP a gash or wound in the body → obs.
1578 ► VENY a hit or thrust in fencing; a wound or blow → obs. exc. Eng. dial.
1591 ► VENUE a thrust or hit in fencing; a stroke or wound with a weapon → obs.
1592 ► BATTERY a mark of beating; a wound or bruise → obs.
1611 ► RANCH a scratch; a flesh wound
1658 ► SAUCIATION a wounding → obs.
1768 ► SAIR a sore; a wound, a bruise → Sc.
1774 ► DAYLIGHT a hole, esp. a fatal wound, made by a sword, a knife, or a bullet → sl.
1781 ► ARR a scar or mark left by a wound → Sc. & Eng. dial.
1790 ► SCRAT a scratch; a very slight wound; a scratching noise → Sc. & Eng. dial.
19C.. ► RANGLE a wound, fester; a wearisome, rankling pain → Eng. dial.
1818 ► GANCH → GAUNCH a gash or wound made by a boar’s tusk → arch.
1825 ► GEG a cut or crack in the hands; a deep cut or wound → Sc.
1865 ► GUT-WINDER a bullet wound in the abdomen → Amer. sl.
1866 ► GAGGER a deep, ragged cut or wound → Sc.
1866 ► GAIG a deep, ragged cut or wound → Sc.
1882 ► LEADEN TONIC a serious, esp. fatal, bullet wound → Amer. West jocular usage
1883 ► LEAD POISONING a serious, esp. fatal, bullet wound → Amer. jocular usage
1900 ► DOZZLE a plug of lint or rag for stopping a wound → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1900 ► GAG a cut or crack in the hands; a deep cut or wound → Sc. (Bk.)
1905 ► VENOM the discharge from a sore or wound → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1910 ► PACKET a wound → sl., orig. military usage
1911 ► BLANE the mark left by a wound → Sc. (Bk.)
1915 ► LOUD ONE a severe wound → World War I army sl.
1916 ► BLIGHTY → BLIGHTY ONE a wound sufficiently serious to warrant return to Britain → Brit. sl.
1916 ► DAISY-PUSHER a fatal wound → army sl.
1942 ► HOMER a wound sufficiently serious to warrant repatriation → Aust. & NZ sl.
1966 ► SCORE a scar or mark left by a wound, a weal → Sc.
1968 ► ASSHOLE a bullet wound; a serious wound → Amer. sl., esp. military
1980 ► RASPBERRY a bloody wound → US students’ sl.
1982 ► SKIN COMPLAINT a bullet wound → US sl.
1992 ► GUT SHOT a bullet wound in the stomach, painful and often fatal → US sl.
1992 ► MEAT SHOT a bullet wound in a muscle, not involving a bone or organ damage → US sl.
2009 ► BACON scabby biking wounds → mountain biking sl. (Bk.)


NOUNS, PERSON
1931 ► UNFINISHED BUSINESS a wounded rival, or a prospective gang victim, not yet killed → US criminals’ sl. 
1978 ► TRAIN WRECK a horribly wounded soldier or casualty department patient → US sl., orig. Vietnam medical corpsmen usage


VERBS
1385 ► OFFEND to strike so as to hurt; to wound, to hurt; to give physical pain to; to harm, to injure → obs.
1400 ► LAUNCH to pierce, to wound; to cut, to slit; to make a wound by piercing → obs.
1415 ► FEATHER to decorate a person with the projecting feather of an arrow; hence, to pierce, to wound → obs.
1567 ► BEWOUND to cover or afflict with wounds → obs.
1577 ► GAPE of wounds, material objects, etc.: to split, to crack, to part asunder
1590 ► MARTYR to inflict wounds or disfiguring blows upon; to mutilate; also, to disfigure the face with weeping → obs.
1599 ► VULNERATE to wound; to hurt → obs.
1633 ► HARROW to tear, to lacerate, to wound physically
1635 ► MARTYRIZE to disfigure or mutilate by the infliction of wounds or blows → obs.
1656 ► CONTRUCIDATE to wound, murder, or kill; to assassinate → obs.
1656 ► SAUCIATE to wound, to hurt, to cut → obs.
19C.. ► ANGER of a wound: to inflame, to irritate → Eng. dial.
19C.. ► FAKE ONESELF to inflict wounds or others disfigure oneself for a criminal purpose → sl.
E19.. ► FAKE to shoot, to wound, to hit or cut; to poison → sl.
E19.. ► WING to shoot but not kill; to wound → US sl.
1830 ► GILVER to ache, to throb (said of the head in a headache, of a wound, etc., not of the heart or pulse) → Eng. dial.
1848 ► MAKE THE FUR FLY to claw; to scratch, to wound severely → sl.
1866 ► GAIG to cut or wound deeply, with the idea of a ragged edge → Sc.
1900 ► GAGGER to cut or wound deeply with the idea of a ragged edge; to cause to project, swell up → Sc. (Bk.)
1900 ► PIP to hit or wound with a shot from a gun → orig. military usage
1902 ► HEAD UP of a wound: to suppurate, to come to a head → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1905 ► PANCH to prick and work a wound to extract matter, or any foreign substance, such as a bullet or prickle → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1915 ► KNOCK KOO-KOO to render unconscious; to mortally wound; to kill →  World War I Amer. sl.
1930 ► GET A PACKET to be killed or wounded; to get into trouble → sl.
1930 ► HAVE A PACKET to be killed or wounded; to get into trouble → sl.
1968 ► DING to wound → US sl.
1991 ► NOTCH to wound → US Vietnam war usage