Guilty of murder or bloodshed.
A breed of large and powerful dogs, with long, smooth, and pendulous ears, and remarkable for acuteness of smell. It is employed to recover game or prey which has escaped wounded from a hunter, and for tracking criminals. Formerly it was used for pursuing runaway slaves. Other varieties of dog are often used for the same purpose and go by the same name. The Cuban bloodhound is said to be a variety of the mastiff.
Covered with blood.
In a bloody manner; cruelly; with a disposition to shed blood.
The state of being bloody.
Destitute of blood, or apparently so; as, bloodless cheeks; lifeless; dead.
bleed; to let blood.
One who, or that which, lets blood; a phlebotomist.
The act or process of letting blood or bleeding, as by opening a vein or artery, or by cupping or leeches; -- esp. applied to venesection.
a desire for bloodshed.
a motor vehicle equipped to collect blood donations.
A plant (Sanguinaria Canadensis), with a red root and red sap, and bearing a pretty, white flower in early spring; -- called also puccoon, redroot, bloodwort, tetterwort, turmeric, and Indian paint. It has acrid emetic properties, and the rootstock is used as a stimulant expectorant. See Sanguinaria.
The shedding or spilling of blood; slaughter; the act of shedding human blood, or taking life, as in war, riot, or murder.
One who sheds blood; a manslayer; a murderer.
Bloodshed.
Red and inflamed; suffused with blood, or having the vessels turgid with blood, as when the conjunctiva is inflamed or irritated.
stained with blood; as, a bloodstained shirt; a bloodstained carpet; a bloodstained sidewalk.
A piece of hard wood loaded at one end with lead, and used to strike the fleam into the vein.
thoroughbred horses (collectively).
A green siliceous stone sprinkled with red jasper, as if with blood; hence the name; -- called also heliotrope. Hematite, an ore of iron yielding a blood red powder or /streak./
Loss of sensation and motion from hemorrhage or congestion in the brain.
Any animal that sucks blood; esp., the leech (Hirudo medicinalis), and related species.
drawing blood from the body of another; as, a plague of bloodsucking insects.
Eager to shed blood; cruel; sanguinary; murderous; having a bloodlust.
The European bullfinch.
A fine or amercement paid as part of a settlement for the shedding of blood; also, a riot wherein blood was spilled.
A tree having the wood or the sap of the color of blood.
A plant, Rumex sanguineus, or bloody-veined dock. The name is applied also to bloodroot (Sanguinaria Canadensis), and to an extensive order of plants (H/modorace/), the roots of many species of which contain a red coloring matter useful in dyeing.
To stain with blood.
Having a cruel, ferocious disposition; bloodthirsty.
A terrible bugbear.
A mass of wrought iron from the Catalan forge or from the puddling furnace, deprived of its dross, and shaped usually in the form of an oblong block by shingling. A large bar of steel formed directly from an ingot by hammering or rolling, being a preliminary shape for further working.
See Bloomery.
A costume for women, consisting of a short dress, with loose trousers gathered round ankles, and (commonly) a broad-brimmed hat.
A furnace and forge in which wrought iron in the form of blooms is made directly from the ore, or (more rarely) from cast iron.
Opening in blossoms; flowering.
In a blooming manner.
A blooming condition.
Without bloom or flowers.
Full of bloom; flowery; flourishing with the vigor of youth; as, a bloomy spray.
Bloom; a blossoming.
The act of blowing; a roaring wind; a blast.
Blossomy.
To put forth blossoms or flowers; to bloom; to blow; to flower.
the process of budding and unfolding of blossoms.
Without blossoms.
Full of blossoms; flowery.
An exposure of a single man to be taken up. A single man left on a point, exposed to be taken up.
A blot or spot, as of color or of ink; especially a large or irregular spot. Also Fig.; as, a moral blotch.
Marked or covered with blotches.
Having blotches.
To cure, as herrings, by salting and smoking them; to bloat.
Without blot.
One who, or that which, blots; esp. a device for absorbing superfluous ink.
Characterized by blots or heavy touches; coarsely depicted; wanting in delineation.
drunk{1}.
A light, loose over-garment, like a smock frock, worn especially by workingmen in France; also, a loose coat of any material, as the undress uniform coat of the United States army.
To orate pompously; -- used especially of politicians and news commentators.
A blowing, esp., a violent blowing of the wind; a gale; as, a heavy blow came on, and the ship put back to port.
An act of fellatio, a form of oral sex; -- a slang term. See blow{11}, v. i.
the leakage of gases from the combustion cylinder of an internal combustion engine between the piston and cylinder wall into the crankcase.
A blowing off steam, water, etc.; as, a blow-off cock or pipe.
The cleaning of the flues of a boiler from scale, etc., by a blast of steam.
the backward escape of unburned gunpowder after a shot.
The downy seed head of a dandelion, which children delight to blow away.
One who, or that which, blows.
A prostitute; a courtesan; a strumpet.
a fish eaten as a delicacy, especially in Japan. It is highly dangerous because of a potent nerve poison (tetrodotoxin) in its ovaries and liver. Chefs require special training to learn how to remove the poisonous parts, and in Japan they must be licensed.
Any species of fly of the genus Musca that deposits its eggs or young larv/ (called flyblows and maggots) upon meat or other animal products.
A tube, as of cane or reed, sometimes twelve feet long, through which an arrow (sometimes poisoned) or other projectile may be impelled by the force of the breath. It is a weapon much used by certain Indians of America and the West Indies; -- called also blowpipe, and blowtube. See Sumpitan.
a very boastful and talkative person.
A cavern in a cliff, at the water level, opening to the air at its farther extremity, so that the waters rush in with each surge and rise in a lofty jet from the extremity.
windy.
A burner that produces a hot flame.
Opened; in blossom or having blossomed, as a flower.
a gay or lavish festivity.
A tube for directing a jet of air into a fire or into the flame of a lamp or candle, so as to concentrate the heat on some object.
A child's game.
See Blowze.
A blossoming; a bloom.
A blowgun.
Windy; as, blowy weather; a blowy upland.
A ruddy, fat-faced woman; a wench.
Having high color from exposure to the weather; ruddy-faced; blowzy; disordered.
Coarse and ruddy-faced; fat and ruddy; high colored; frowzy.
To swell; to puff out, as with weeping.
To swell or disfigure (the face) with weeping; to wet with tears.
Swollen; turgid; as, a blubbered lip.
The act of weeping noisily.
Swollen; protuberant.
A kind of half boot, or high shoe, with laces over the tongue; -- named from the Prussian general Bl/cher.
A short stick, with one end loaded, or thicker and heavier that the other, used as an offensive weapon.
To make blue; to dye of a blue color; to make blue by heating, as metals, etc.
a member of the nobility or aristocracy, or a person of high social status.
a tight-fitting trousers made of blue denim or a similar fabric, designed originally to serve as inexpensive durable workclothes, and often having metal rivets for reinforcement. They have become very popular as casual wear for all age groups, and more expensive and more carefully styled and tailored versions called designer jeanshave also become popular among girls and women.
unable to see the color blue or to distinguish the colors blue and yellow.
inability to distinguish blue and yellow.
of aristocratic birth and refined upbringing.
A broad, flat Scottish cap of blue woolen, or one wearing such cap; a Scotchman.
an annual Eurasian plant (Centaurea cyanus) which grows in grain fields; -- called also bachelor's button. It receives its name from its blue bottle-shaped flowers. Varieties cultivated in North America have showy heads of blue or purple or pink or white flowers
of or designating work or workers in industry not requiring well-groomed appearance.
The blue-cheeked honeysucker of Australia.
Having blue eyes.
A name given to fluor spar in Derbyshire, where it is used for ornamental purposes.
to change, delete, or abridge (a portion of a text) with a blue pencil (or as if with a blue pencil), as in the editing process; -- of books, etc.
selected or chosen for special qualifications; as, a blue-ribbon grand jury.
Having blue veins or blue streaks.
A trout (Salmo oquassa) inhabiting some of the lakes of Maine. A salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) of the Columbia River and northward. An American river herring (Clupea /stivalis), closely allied to the alewife.
The hero of a medi/val French nursery legend, who, leaving home, enjoined his young wife not to open a certain room in his castle. She entered it, and found the murdered bodies of his former wives. -- Also used adjectively of a subject which it is forbidden to investigate.
A plant of the genus Campanula, especially the Campanula rotundifolia, which bears blue bell-shaped flowers; the harebell. A plant of the genus Scilla (Scilla nutans).
The berry of several species of Vaccinium, an ericaceous genus, differing from the American huckleberries in containing numerous minute seeds instead of ten nutlets. The commonest species are Vaccinium Pennsylvanicum and Vaccinium vacillans. Vaccinium corymbosum is the tall blueberry.
A duck of the genus Fuligula. Two American species (Fuligula marila and Fuligula affinis) are common. See Scaup duck.
A small song bird (Sialia sialis), very common in the United States, and, in the north, one of the earliest to arrive in spring. The male is blue, with the breast reddish. It is related to the European robin.
A small European bird; the blue-throated warbler.
The bluepoll. The blue bonnet or blue titmouse.
One dressed in blue, as a soldier, a sailor, a beadle, etc.
A species of whitefish (Coregonus nigripinnis) found in Lake Michigan.
A large voracious fish (Pomatomus saitatrix), of the family Carangid/, valued as a food fish, and widely distributed on the American coast. On the New Jersey and Rhode Island coast it is called the horse mackerel, in Virginia saltwater tailor, or skipjack.
One of a class of paupers or pensioners, or licensed beggars, in Scotland, to whim annually on the king's birthday were distributed certain alms, including a blue gown; a beadsman.
Same as bluing.
a serviceman in the navy.