English Dictionary |
FULL-BLOODED
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Dictionary entry overview: What does full-blooded mean?
• FULL-BLOODED (adjective)
The adjective FULL-BLOODED has 2 senses:
2. endowed with or exhibiting great bodily or mental health
Familiarity information: FULL-BLOODED used as an adjective is rare.
Dictionary entry details
Sense 1
Meaning:
Of unmixed ancestry
Synonyms:
blooded; full-blood; full-blooded
Context example:
blooded Jersies
Similar:
purebred (bred for many generations from member of a recognized breed or strain)
Sense 2
Meaning:
Endowed with or exhibiting great bodily or mental health
Synonyms:
full-blooded; hearty; lusty; red-blooded
Context example:
a hearty glow of health
Similar:
healthy (having or indicating good health in body or mind; free from infirmity or disease)
Context examples
The sight of him put me at my ease, for he was a merry-looking man, handsome too in a portly, full-blooded way, with laughing eyes and pouting, sensitive lips.
(Rodney Stone, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)
Either of the two fleshy, full-blooded margins of the mouth.
(Murine Lip, NLM, Medical Subject Headings)
He was a hearty, full-blooded fellow, full of spirits and energy, the very opposite to me in most respects, but we had some subjects in common, and it was a bond of union when I found that he was as friendless as I. Finally, he invited me down to his father’s place at Donnithorpe, in Norfolk, and I accepted his hospitality for a month of the long vacation.
(The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)
And then, as these full-blooded, powerful men became heated with their wine, angry eyes began to glare across the table, and amid the grey swirls of tobacco-smoke the lamp-light gleamed upon the fierce, hawk-like Jews, and the flushed, savage Saxons.
(Rodney Stone, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)
He was a type and leader of a strange breed of men which has vanished away from England—the full-blooded, virile buck, exquisite in his dress, narrow in his thoughts, coarse in his amusements, and eccentric in his habits.
(Rodney Stone, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)
The long, many-pillared room, with its mirrors and chandeliers, was crowded with full-blooded, loud-voiced men-about-town, all in the same dark evening dress with white silk stockings, cambric shirt-fronts, and little, flat chapeau-bras under their arms.
(Rodney Stone, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)
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