Online Google Dictionary

bloodied 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈblədē/,
Font size:

bloodying, present participle; bloodied, past tense; bloodies, 3rd person singular present; bloodied, past participle;
  1. Cover or stain with blood
    • - he ended the fight with his face bloodied and battered
    • - she has been bloodied in her three years on the commission

  1. (bloody) having or covered with or accompanied by blood; "a bloody nose"; "your scarf is all bloody"; "the effects will be violent and probably bloody"; "a bloody fight"
  2. (bloody) extremely; "you are bloody right"; "Why are you so all-fired aggressive?"
  3. (bloody) bally(a): informal intensifiers; "what a bally (or blinking) nuisance"; "a bloody fool"; "a crashing bore"; "you flaming idiot"
  4. Bloody is the adjectival form of blood but may also be used as an expletive attributive (intensifier) in Australia, Britain, Ireland, Canada, Singapore, South Africa (in the form of bladdy or blerrie), New Zealand, India, Pakistan, Anglophone Caribbean and Sri Lanka. ...
  5. (bloody) To draw blood from one's opponent in a fight; To demonstrably harm the cause of an opponent; Covered in blood; Characterised by great bloodshed; Used as an intensifier; Used to intensify what follows this adverb
  6. (Bloody) the great Australian adjective
  7. (BLOODY) adj. Descriptive term for something that frustrates or bothers someone, as in "that bloody boss!"
  8. (Bloody) An intensive derived from the substantive 'blood', a name applied to the Bucks, Scrowers, and Mohocks of the seventeenth centuries.
  9. (Bloody) If a customer requests a dish very rare, blue rare, it may be referred to as bloody.  Example: “Ordering: one fillet, bloody“.
  10. (Bloody) Is used by early Heralds to signify Gules.
  11. (Bloody) adj./adv. An intensifier. "That bloody idiot needs a good thumping."
  12. (Bloody) an adjective thrown into a sentence to stress something eg bloody hot is VERY hot.
  13. (bloody) 1. considered to be 'the Great Australian Adjective' because of its prolific use and its significance as an intensifier. 2. Originally, an oath: identified by some linguists as an elision of 'by my lady' (Mary, mother of Jesus).
  14. (bloody) [Vulgar Brit. Slang] cursed; damned.
  15. (bloody) an intensifier (e.g. very, entirely, truly, etc.) that's used with exclamations (e.g. Bloody hell! or Bloody oath!); derives as a contraction of the phrase by our lady
  16. (bloody) expl. Damn, another tricky word to define. Bloody is another great British multi-purpose swear word. Most well known as part of the phrase "Bloody hell!" which could best be described as an exclamation of surprise, shock or anger. ...
  17. (‘Bloody’) Not as in Mary, not as in how your carrots get if you slice your finger off while chopping them. As in ‘That was a bloody great sandwich!’. I suppose the American equivalent is ‘damn good’.