Dictionary Definition
bloody adj
1 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" [ant: bloodless]
2 (used of persons) informal intensifiers; "what
a bally (or blinking) nuisance"; "a bloody fool"; "a crashing
bore"; "you flaming idiot" [syn: bally(a), blinking(a),
bloody(a),
blooming(a),
crashing(a),
flaming(a),
fucking(a)] adv
: extremely; "you are bloody right"; "Why are you so all-fired
aggressive?" [syn: damn,
all-fired] v :
cover with blood; "bloody your hands" [also: bloodied, bloodiest, bloodier]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes with: -ʌdi
Adjective
- Covered in blood.
- All that remained of his right hand after the accident was a bloody stump.
- Characterised by great bloodshed.
- There have been bloody battles between the two tribes.
- In the context of "UK|AU|mildly|vulgar|not comparable": Used to
intensify what follows this adjective.
- 1994: Robert Jordan, Lord of Chaos, 519 - Try to keep those bloody women's bloody heads on their bloody shoulders by somehow helping them make this whole mad impossible scheme actually work
Synonyms
Translations
covered in blood
- Czech: krvavý
- Dutch: bloederig, bloederige
- Finnish: verinen
- French: sanglant, sanglante
- German: blutig
- Greek: ματωμένος
- Hungarian: véres
- Italian: sanguinante; cruento
- Polish: krwawy , krwawa , krwawe
- Romanian: sângeros
- Russian: окровавленный
- Slovak: krvavý -á -é
- Swedish: blodig
- Vietnamese: chảy máu, dính máu (1)
characterised by great bloodshed
intensifier
- Dutch: stomme (only with idiot)
- French: foutu, foutue
- Italian: fottuto, maledetto
- Slovak: pojebaný -á -é vulgar
- Polish: pierdolony, jebany -a -e vulgar
- ttbc Indonesian: berdarah
- ttbc Old English: drēoriġ
Derived terms
Adverb
- In the context of "UK|mildly|vulgar": Used to intensify what
follows this adverb.
- 1994: Robert Jordan, Lord of Chaos, 109 - "Dice are no bloody good," David said.
Synonyms
Translations
intensifier
- Dutch: verdomd
Verb
- To draw blood from one's opponent in a fight.
- To demonstrably harm the cause of an opponent.
Extensive Definition
Bloody is the adjectival form of blood but may also be used as an
expletive
attributive (intensifier) in Britain,
Ireland,
Canada,
South East
Asia, Australia,
New
Zealand, and Sri Lanka.
Nowadays it is considered (by most of the population of these
countries) to be a very mild expletive, and unlikely to cause
offence in most circles.
Etymology
Some say it may be derived from the phrase "by Our Lady", a sacrilegious invocation of the Virgin Mary. The abbreviated form "By'r Lady" is common in Shakespeare's plays around the turn of the 17th century, and interestingly Jonathan Swift about 100 years later writes both "it grows by'r Lady cold" and "it was bloody hot walking to-day" http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/s/s97s/letter24.html suggesting that a transition from one to the other could have been under way. Others regard this explanation as dubious. Eric Partridge, in Words, Words, Words (Methuen, 1933), describes this as "phonetically implausible". Geoffrey Hughes in Swearing: A social history of foul language, oaths and profanity in English (Blackwell, 1991), points out that "by my lady" is not an adjective whereas "bloody" is, and suggests that the slang use of the term started with "bloody drunk" meaning "fired up and ready for a fight".It has been said, however, that the offensive use
of the word first came up during the Wars of Roses when Royalty and
nobility that is all those "of the blood" (meaning blue-blooded
descendants of Charlemagne) wrought death and the most bloody
destruction on England. Elizabeth I is also supposed to have used
it when referring to her elder Sister, Mary due to her persecution
of Protestants.
Another thought is that it simply comes from a
reference to blood, a view that Eric
Partridge prefers. However, this overlooks the considerable
strength of social and religious pressure in past centuries to
avoid profanity. This resulted in the appearance or slang appropriation of words that
in some cases appear to bear little relation to their source:
"Crikey" for "Christ"; "Gee" for
"Jesus";
"Heck" for "Hell"; "Gosh" for
"God"; "dash",
"dang" or "darn" for "damn"
(though it bears noting that "darn" is a legitimate verb in its own
right, and did not originate a minced oath,
despite the fact that its original meaning is now somewhat obscure
and that it is most often heard as a slang euphemism for "damn"
with the same apparent meaning of "to curse" as an antonym to the verb "salve").
These, too, might be considered implausible etymologies if looked
at only from the point of view of phonetics. Given the context in
which it is used, as well as the evidence of Swift's writing, the
possibility that "bloody" is also a minced oath (or more precisely,
a slang usage of an otherwise legitimate word masquerading as a
minced oath, like "darn") cannot be lightly dismissed. The
suggestion that it originated as a reference to Jesus "bleeding" on
the cross is compelling for its shock value, callousness and
sacrilegious intent, just as the Irish, and those of the diaspora,
will exclaim "suffering Jesus" in response to something
shocking.
Usage
Although in the 1600s the word appeared to be relatively innocuous, after about 1750 the word assumed more profane connotations in the UK and British Empire. Various substitutions were devised to convey the essence of the oath, but with less offence; these included "bleeding", "blinking", "blooming" and "ruddy".On the opening night of George
Bernard Shaw's comedy Pygmalion
in 1914,
Mrs
Patrick Campbell, in the role of Eliza Doolittle, created a
sensation with the line "Walk! Not bloody likely!"
The use of bloody in adult UK broadcasting
aroused controversy in the 1960s & 1970s but is now
unremarkable (for comparison, in the Harry Potter
movies, which are geared towards children, the character Ron says
"bloody hell" many times in all the movies).
Usage outside of the UK
Bloody has always been a very common part of Australian speech and has not been considered profane there for some time. The word was dubbed "the Australian adjective" by The Bulletin on 18 August 1894. One Australian performer has even made it his middle name, to show how Australian he is - Kevin Bloody Wilson. In the 1940s an Australian divorce court judge held that "the word bloody is so common in modern parlance that it is not regarded as swearing". Meanwhile, Neville Chamberlain's government was fining Britons for using the word in public. The use of "bloody" as an intensifier used to be considered highly offensive in India.The word as an expletive is seldom used in the
USA. However,
in Canada,
it is much more commonly used, and not considered a major
profanity. In the USA it is sometimes
used to imitate or ridicule the British.
The term "bloody murder" (usually in reference to a particularly
loud scream or yell) is also in common use, without any connection
with the British usage. The term is usually used when the intention
is to mimick an Englishman, though there are some who have adopted
it from the British as an everyday term. The term however can
sometimes be seen in an American movie or TV episode. For example,
in Episode One, Series One of 1987 TV series "Tour of
Duty", an American infantry officer whose outpost is under
attack, is seen screaming down the phone, "where the bloody hell
are you?", attempting to get air support for a napalm attack.
There is also "Bloody hell", often pronounced "Bloody
'ell," which can mean "Damn it," or be used as a general expression
of surprise or as a general intensifier. It is talked about in a
poem about the letter H (aitch)-
Letter aitch, in some tongues, you can tell, Is
pronounced not at all, or not well. By the Brits it is rated Their
second-most hated, Right after, of course, "bloody ell."
In March 2006 Australia's
national tourism commission launched an advertising
campaign targeted at potential visitors in several
English-speaking countries. The ad sparked a surprise controversy
because of its ending (in which a cheerful, bikini-wearing female
spokesperson delivers the ad's call-to-action by saying
"...so
where the bloody hell are you?"). Initially, the
Broadcast Advertising Clearance Centre (BACC) required that a
modified version of the ad be shown in the United Kingdom, without
the word "bloody". However, in May 2006, the
Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) ruled that the word
"bloody" was not an inappropriate marketing tool and the original
version of the ad was permitted to air.
In Malaysia and to a
certain extent Singapore, the
word bloody is commonly used as an expletive. One example is
"bloody bastard" which has been transformed into a more polite
word, "bloody-basket" or "blardi-basket" in Manglish, the
colloquial version of the English language as spoken in Malaysia.
Other examples include "Wah!! Damn bloody hot!", usually a
reference to the unimaginably hot weather in Malaysia, even for the
locals.
Euphemisms for bloody
Publications such as newspapers, police reports, and so on may print b__y instead of the full profanity. A spoken language equivalent is blankety or, less frequently, blanked or blanky; the spoken words are all variations of blank, which, as a verbal representation of a dash, is used as a euphemism for a variety of bad words.Notes
External links
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Draconian, Tartarean, abrade, accursed, aggressive, agonize, animal, antagonistic, anthropophagous,
atrocious, barbaric, barbarous, bark, battling, beastly, bellicose, belligerent, bestial, bleed, bleeding, blemish, blood-colored,
blood-spattered, bloodstain, bloodstained, bloodthirsty,
bloody-minded, bloody-red, blooming, break, brutal, brutalized, brute, brutish, burn, cannibalistic, chafe, chauvinist, chauvinistic, check, chip, chylifactive, chylifactory, chylific, claw, combative, complete, consummate, contentious, convulse, crack, craze, crucify, cruel, cruel-hearted, cursed, cussed, cut, cutthroat, damn, damnable, damned, dashed, demoniac, demoniacal, devilish, diabolic, ecchymose, ecchymosed, enemy, ensanguine, ensanguined, excruciate, execrable, fell, feral, ferine, ferocious, fiendish, fiendlike, fierce, fighting, fracture, fray, frazzle, fret, full of fight, gall, gash, goddamn, goddamned, gory, grim, gross, harrow, hawkish, hellish, hemorrhage, hemorrhaging, homicidal, hostile, humoral, hurt, ichorous, impale, incise, infernal, inhuman, inhumane, inimical, injure, jingo, jingoish, jingoist, jingoistic, kill by inches,
kill-crazy, lacerate,
lachrymal, lacrimatory, lancinate, lose blood,
macerate, maim, make mincemeat of, malign, malignant, martial, martyr, martyrize, maul, merciless, militant, militaristic, military, murdering, murderous, mutilate, noncivilized, offensive, out-and-out,
phlegmy, pierce, pitiless, pugnacious, puncture, punish, purulent, pussy, quarrelsome, rack, rank, red-handed, rend, rheumy, rip, ruddy, run, rupture, ruthless, saber-rattling,
sadistic, sanguinary, sanguine, sanguineous, sanious, satanic, savage, scald, scarify, scorch, scotch, scrape, scrappy, scratch, scuff, self-destructive, serous, sharkish, shed blood, skin, slash, slaughterous, slavering, slit, soldierlike, soldierly, spill blood,
sprain, stab, stick, strain, subhuman, suicidal, suppurated, suppurating, suppurative, tameless, tear, tearlike, torment, torture, traumatize, trigger-happy,
truculent, unchristian, uncivilized, unfriendly, ungentle, unhuman, unmitigated, unpacific, unpeaceable, unpeaceful, untamed, vicious, warlike, warmongering, warring, wild, wolfish, wound, wrench, wring