2. Noun. (plural of blood) ¹
3. Verb. (third-person singular of blood#Verb blood) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Bloods
1. blood [v] - See also: blood
Lexicographical Neighbors of Bloods
Literary usage of Bloods
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Journal of Applied Psychology by American Psychological Association, American Association for Applied Psychology (1922)
"Over one-half of the mixed bloods reported "not tired" and 57 per cent of the
... Now as for the full bloods if the median performer was doing 22.5 per cent ..."
2. Publication of the American Sociological Society by American Sociological Association (1918)
"THE PERSONALITY OF MIXED Bloods EB REUTER University of Iowa ABSTRACT The
personality of mixed bloods.—The personality bears a definite relationship to the ..."
3. Our Debt to the Red Man: The French-Indians in the Development of the United by Louise Seymour Houghton (1918)
"It has been amply shown that French mixed-bloods are in general more alert,
industrious, reliable, with a deeper sense of the importance of education, ..."
4. Psychological Review by American Psychological Association (1879)
"For, to illustrate with the average score of the full bloods in any test, ...
These read thus, ioo, 134 and 143 for mixed bloods and ioo, 122, ..."
5. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1902)
"I have now tested upwards of 230 bloods obtained from animals of all classes of
vertebrates with such anti-serum for human blood, and have, with the single ..."
6. Handy-book of Literary Curiosities by William Shepard Walsh (1892)
"But Murray sees in it a reference to the habits of the " bloods" or swells of
the eighteenth century. Bloody drunk—as drunk as a blood— was probably its ..."
7. The Anatomy of Melancholy: What it Is, with All the Kinds, Causes, Symptoms by Robert Burton (1862)
"... in the comedy : they will stifle nature, their young bloods must not participate
of youthful pleasures, but be as they are themselves old on a sudden. ..."
8. The Anatomy of melancholy v. 3 by Robert Burton (1875)
"... in the comedy : they will stifle nature, their young bloods must not participate
of youthful pleasures, but be as they are themselves old on a sudden. ..."