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dry-gulch
[drahy-guhlch]
verb (used with object)
to ambush with the intent of killing or severely mauling.
The riders were dry-gulched by bandits.
to betray by a sudden change of attitude or allegiance.
The party dry-gulched its chief candidate at the convention.
Word History and Origins
Origin of dry-gulch1
Example Sentences
We’ve been in a long, dry-gulch period of dully politicized sex, which is now sputtering out into round-the-clock crusades for transgender bathrooms—knuckle-rapping morality repackaged as hygiene.
In 1905 it was set up as a dry-gulch railroad town handling transshipments of fruits and vegetables from California to the Midwest.
But the threat to dry-gulch him was another matter.
If you ever come up here we'll dry-gulch you, sure.
"I wanted to have a look at the man who wrote the note to James Cunningham threatenin' to dry-gulch him if he ever came to Dry Valley again."
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