How to Use carnage in a Sentence

carnage

noun
  • Reporters described the highway accident as a scene of carnage.
  • But there are changes that can be made to the streets of cities and towns that can stem the carnage.
    Jake Blumgart, oregonlive, 7 Feb. 2022
  • With the charges comes hope for change amid all the carnage and the heartache, Crifasi said.
    Theresa Waldrop, CNN, 3 Dec. 2021
  • Daly, well back of the pack while still a lap down, managed to avoid the carnage.
    Nathan Brown, The Indianapolis Star, 17 Feb. 2023
  • Then there may be a new round of carnage that comes from that.
    Jeff John Roberts, Fortune, 1 Aug. 2022
  • But none of that could have prepared fans for the carnage to come in episode 5.
    EW.com, 26 June 2024
  • The epicenter of the carnage is the Strait of Gibraltar.
    Tomas Weber, Rolling Stone, 18 May 2024
  • Like The Wire, it, too, is set in Baltimore amidst the carnage and chaos of the drug war.
    Andy Meek, BGR, 19 Mar. 2022
  • And hundreds gather along the route to cheer them on (or watch the carnage).
    oregonlive, 16 Aug. 2023
  • All the seeds that have been planted bear fruit and it’s just carnage.
    Zack Sharf, Variety, 20 June 2022
  • The carnage — stretching from Lviv in the west to the eastern city of Kharkiv — could have been much worse.
    Alex Horton, Washington Post, 13 Oct. 2022
  • Amid some of the worst carnage of the war, bodies were buried in common graves or left in the streets.
    Fortune, 21 Apr. 2022
  • And we have been bathed in this level of carnage all our lives.
    Michelle Cheng, Quartz, 25 Oct. 2022
  • The biologists didn’t know what to make of the carnage.
    Elizabeth Kolbert, The New York Review of Books, 31 Aug. 2023
  • The carnage factor is high here, and Hero Doughnuts is right across the street.
    Joseph Goodman | Jgoodman@al.com, al, 6 July 2022
  • Those hate crimes, of course, are separate from protests about the carnage in Gaza.
    Anita Chabria, Los Angeles Times, 7 May 2024
  • The carnage was the work of just two orcas, nicknamed Port and Starboard, who are known to hunt sharks in the region.
    Stephanie Pappas, Scientific American, 11 Apr. 2023
  • Aptos Labs isn’t the only company born out of the carnage of the Diem project.
    Anne Sraders, Fortune, 10 July 2022
  • After the past two years of carnage, all of this may be so much water under the bridge.
    Samuel Charap, Foreign Affairs, 16 Apr. 2024
  • The Arizona was the centerpiece of the carnage that morning.
    James Queally, Los Angeles Times, 2 Apr. 2024
  • For the past days, weeks, and months, energy stocks have been one of the few respites from market carnage.
    Eric Wallerstein, WSJ, 7 Oct. 2022
  • The many bloody killings give you just enough gore to be grossed out without reveling in the carnage.
    Scott Mendelson, Forbes, 10 Sep. 2021
  • Still, the film is firmly in the pocket of Rockwell and Ronan as the odd pair working to solve the carnage.
    Amy Nicholson, Variety, 7 Sep. 2022
  • In Wuhan, China, where the film begins, a lone corpse on the street implies the viral carnage to come.
    John Anderson, WSJ, 11 Oct. 2021
  • Yellow crime tape snapping in the wind was unfurled for blocks past either end of the worst of the carnage.
    Washington Post, 22 Nov. 2021
  • In the carnage of Carti’s Inferno, all is fast, and all is rage.
    Pitchfork, 1 Oct. 2024
  • Sarah Sherman and Molly Kearney jump in to stop the carnage.
    Gil Kaufman, Billboard, 3 Feb. 2023
  • The risk of policy carnage is high, and the fallout of this could well be severe.
    Mike O'Sullivan, Forbes, 23 Apr. 2022
  • Both schools arrived in New Orleans on Sunday and were reportedly just blocks away from the carnage that struck the city.
    Ryan Gaydos, Fox News, 2 Jan. 2025
  • Authorities found crude bombs in the neighborhood of the attack in an apparent attempt to cause more carnage.
    Jack Brook, Los Angeles Times, 5 Jan. 2025

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'carnage.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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