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Benumbed   Listen
verb
Benumb  v. t.  (past & past part. benumbed; pres. part. benumbing)  To make torpid; to deprive of sensation or sensibility; to stupefy; as, a hand or foot benumbed by cold. "The creeping death benumbed her senses first."



adjective
Benumbed  adj.  Made torpid; numbed; stupefied; deadened; as, a benumbed body and mind.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Benumbed" Quotes from Famous Books



... the brown hills on the way to her mother with the news, saying over and over to her benumbed senses that Gavin was not dead, that he was alive. It seemed as if her heart had been so stupefied with grief that it could not yet accept joy. She ran in a kind of dream saying that she would soon wake up and find that this was ...
— In Orchard Glen • Marian Keith

... the second time, when, after having crossed these mountains, he passed the Tanais to subdue the Scythians, and the soldiers were oppressed with thirst, hunger, fatigue, and despair, so that a great number died on the road, or lost their feet from congelation; the cold seizing them, it benumbed their hands, and they fell at full length on the snow to rise no more. The best means they knew, says Q. Curtius, to escape that mortal numbness, was not to stop, but to force themselves to keep marching, or else to light great ...
— Napoleon's Campaign in Russia Anno 1812 • Achilles Rose

... where, besides this, the shoe pinched in the United States. I told him that it pinched in various places, but that perhaps the worst pinch arises from the premature admission to full political rights of men who have been so benumbed and stunted intellectually and morally in other countries that their exercise of political rights in America is frequently an injury, not only to others, but to themselves. In proof of this I cited the case of the crowds whom I had seen some years before huddled together ...
— Autobiography of Andrew Dickson White Volume II • Andrew Dickson White

... side, deep in the waves. He goes down suddenly, cold, frightened, benumbed. He feels that some one is trying to pull the rope out of his hands. It must be Lockwin. The drowning man clutches with a hundred forces. The tug increases. The struggling man will lose the rope. Lockwin is striking Corkey with a bludgeon. That is unfair! There is a last pull, ...
— David Lockwin--The People's Idol • John McGovern

... sorcerers, within these last few years, are marvellously increased within your Grace's realm. Your Grace's subjects pine away even to the death, their colour fadeth, their flesh rotteth, their speech is benumbed, their senses are bereft. I pray God they never practise further than upon the subject.' For himself, the bishop declares, 'these eyes have seen most evident and manifest marks of their wickedness.' The annalist adds that this, no doubt, ...
— The Superstitions of Witchcraft • Howard Williams


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