cas·trate
ˈka-ˌstrāt
castrated; castrating; castrates
1
a
: to deprive (a male animal or person) of the testes
The sexes of sheep are not ascertained by agriculturists until several months after birth, at the period when the males are castrated.—Charles Darwin
… he has been able to perform works written for the castrati, the boys who were castrated before puberty in the mid-1500s in Europe so they could achieve ultra-high notes.—Kerrie O'Brien
b
: to block the production of sex hormones in (a person) by the use of hormone therapy (see hormone therapy sense b) : to cause to undergo chemical castration
a drug used to chemically castrate sex offenders
Health care professionals treat advanced prostate cancer patients by reducing production of the hormone testosterone. … physicians may medically castrate patients, a non-surgical method that uses drugs such as synthetic luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) agonists.—San Diego Center for Urology Care
2
a
: to deprive of virility : emasculate
Throughout his writing life Hemingway constantly criticized and satirized Fitzgerald, whom he felt had been psychologically castrated by Zelda, couldn't hold his liquor, had no personal dignity, and publicly humiliated himself.—Jeffrey Meyers
b
: to deprive of vitality, strength, or effectiveness
The bill was castrated by removal of the enforcement provisions.
… a barrage of questions about whether energy policy dictated by the White House would castrate the EPA's drive to clean up air pollution.—Nature
plural castrates
: a castrated individual
Arango was a well-known celibate with a special devotion to St. Erasmus of Delft, the castrate.—Donald Barthelme
Castration of meat-producing male animals has been widely used for a very long time, mainly for an easier control of their behaviour and the higher propensity of castrates to deposit fat, a commodity that has been in high demand until quite recently.—Carrick Devine and M. Dikeman
Love words? Need even more definitions?
Merriam-Webster unabridged
Share