¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Bluidy
1. bloody [adj BLUIDIER, BLUIDIEST] - See also: bloody
Lexicographical Neighbors of Bluidy
Literary usage of Bluidy
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Anglo-Saxon Review by Randolph Spencer Churchill (1900)
"THE bluidy ADVOCATE MACKENZIE ' BY FRANCIS WATT JHE crowded churchyard of
Greyfriars, at Edinburgh, is rich with the dust of them that made Scots history. ..."
2. The Complete Poetical Works of Robert Burns by Robert Burns, William Ernest Henley (1897)
"... Was like a bluidy tiger I' th' inu that day. And bind him down wi' caution, —
That stipend is a carnal weed There, try his mettle ou the Creed, ..."
3. The Scottish Ballads by Robert Chambers (1829)
"O bluidy, bluidy were his hawks, And bluidy were his hounds; But milk-white was
the gallant steed, That bore him frae the bounds." " Yes, bluidy, bluidy ..."
4. The Anecdotage of Glasgow: Comprising Anecdotes and Anecdotal Incidents of by Robert ALISON (1892)
"... were laid by their mourning relatives at peace in one grave, dug at the place
where they fell, which has ever since been known as the bluidy Neuk. ..."
5. A Complete Word and Phrase Concordance to the Poems and Songs of Robert by J. B. Reid (1889)
"Tkt Ordination, 4. Thro' bluidy flood or field to dash, О how unfit ! . . .
Toa Haggis. Till Lairds forbad, by strict commands. Sic bluidy pranks. ..."