narcotizing
IPA: nˈɑrkʌtaɪzɪŋ
adjective
- inducing stupor or narcosis
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Examples of "narcotizing" in Sentences
- Cold realization burst the narcotizing bubble of nostalgia.
- And there's always the narcotizing amount of vapid "reality" entertainment clogging the airwaves.
- But is there really such a sharp line between the respectably energizing and the shamefully narcotizing?
- The fish is not so good as that caught further down, and the natives have a habit of narcotizing it: the Silurus electricus is exceptionally plentiful.
- Comedy Central itself, has taken the temperature of the real world that MTV is too busy narcotizing to notice and the prognosis is next-level narrative.
- Instead of fuming about the situation, he spent it in one of your company's labs, gengineering the modified molecular structure of an illegal but well-known and widely available epidural narcotizing agent.
- Eventually the pain ebbed and she began to feel tranquil again; a narcotizing effect seemed to have pervaded her brain—a natural secretion of endorphins, she thought instinctively—and she felt consciousness begin to slip away.
- The torpedo narcotizes the creatures that it wants to catch, overpowering them by the power of shock that is resident in its body, and feeds upon them; it also hides in the sand and mud, and catches all the creatures that swim in its way and come under its narcotizing influence.
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