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crucify (v.)

mid-14c., "to put to death by nailing or otherwise affixing to a cross," from Old French crucifer crucefiier (12c., Modern French crucifier), from Vulgar Latin *crucificare, from Late Latin crucifigere "to fasten to a cross," from cruci, dative of Latin crux "cross" (see crux) + figere "to fasten, fix" (from PIE root *dheigw- "to stick, fix").

An ancient mode of capital punishment considered especially ignominious by the Romans and Greeks and reserved in general for slaves and highway robbers. In scripture, "subdue, mortify" (the flesh, etc.), early 14c. Figurative sense of "to torment" is from 1620s. Related: Crucified; crucifying.

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Definitions of crucify from WordNet

crucify (v.)
kill by nailing onto a cross;
Jesus Christ was crucified
crucify (v.)
treat cruelly;
Synonyms: torment / rag / bedevil / dun / frustrate
crucify (v.)
hold within limits and control;
Synonyms: mortify / subdue
crucify (v.)
criticize harshly or violently;
The critics crucified the author for plagiarizing a famous passage
Synonyms: savage / blast / pillory
From wordnet.princeton.edu