livid

livid
adjective Etymology: French livide, from Latin lividus, from livēre to be blue; akin to Welsh lliw color and probably to Russian sliva plum Date: 1622 1. discolored by bruising ; black-and-blue <
the livid traces of the sharp scourges — Abraham Cowley
>
2. ashen, pallid <
this cross, thy livid face, thy pierced hands and feet — Walt Whitman
>
3. reddish <
a fan of gladiolas blushed livid under the electric letters — Truman Capote
>
4. very angry ; enraged <
was livid at his son's disobedience
>
lividity nounlividness noun

New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.

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  • Livid — was an Australian alternative rock music festival, which was held annually from 1989 to 2003. The festival date was standardised as late October/early November since 1991 until 2003. While it has never been officially cancelled, no festivals have …   Wikipedia

  • LiViD — LiViD, short for Linux Video and DVD, was a collection of projects that aim to create program tools and software libraries related to DVD for Linux operating system.In 2002, LiViD project leader Matthew Pavlovich was sued by the DVD Copy Control… …   Wikipedia

  • livid — LIVÍD, Ă, livizi, de, adj. (Despre faţa omului) Vânăt, învineţit (de emoţie, de frig, de oboseală). ♦ fig. (Despre lumină) Slab, palid. – Din fr. livide, lat. lividus. Trimis de RACAI, 21.11.2003. Sursa: DEX 98  LIVÍD adj. învineţit, verde,… …   Dicționar Român

  • livid — [adj1] pale, ashen ashy, blanched, bloodless, colorless, discolored, dusky, gloomy, greyish, grisly, leaden, lurid, murky, pallid, pasty, wan, waxen; concept 618 Ant. blushing, brilliant, flushed, radiant, rosy livid [adj2] bruised black and blue …   New thesaurus

  • Livid — Liv id (l[i^]v [i^]d), a. [L. lividus, from livere to be of a blush color, to be black and blue: cf. F. livide.] 1. Black and blue; grayish blue; of a lead color; discolored, as flesh may be from a contusion. Cowper. [1913 Webster] There followed …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • livid — early 15c., of a bluish leaden color, from M.Fr. livide and directly from L. lividus of a bluish color, black and blue, figuratively envious, spiteful, malicious, from livere be bluish, earlier *slivere, from PIE *sliwo , suffixed form of root *… …   Etymology dictionary

  • livid — The meaning that is more familiar today, ‘furiously angry’, is a recent one not recorded before the 20c. The earlier (17c) meaning, still in use, is ‘of a bluish leaden colour; discoloured by bruising’: • A huge, livid, recently healed scar ran… …   Modern English usage

  • livid — [liv′id] adj. [< Fr or L: Fr livide < L lividus, akin to livere, to be black and blue < IE * (s)līwos < base * (s)li , bluish > SLOE, OSlav sliva, plum] 1. discolored by a bruise; black and blue 2. grayish blue; lead colored:… …   English World dictionary

  • Livīd — (lat. lividus), bleifarbig, fahl; mißgünstig, neidisch …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Livid — Livīd (lat.), bleifarbig, fahl …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • livid —   [lateinisch], Medizin: bläulich, fahl (bezogen auf krankhafte Verfärbungen von Haut und Schleimhaut). * * * li|vid, li|vi|de <Adj.; ...der, ...deste> [lat. lividus = bläulich]: 1. (Med.) bläulich, blassblau, fahl (von Haut u.… …   Universal-Lexikon

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