释义 |
[ bluhd-ing ] / ˈblʌd ɪŋ /
noun Chiefly British.(in fox hunting) an informal initiation ceremony in which the face of a novice is smeared with the blood of the first fox that person has seen killed. Origin of bloodingFirst recorded in 1590–1600; blood + -ing1 Words nearby bloodingblood group-specific substances A and B, blood guilt, bloodguilty, blood heat, bloodhound, blooding, Blood is thicker than water, blood knot, bloodless, bloodless operation, Bloodless Revolution Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for bloodingO Tony, says he, masters mare is blooding streams, and I be sent over to you to beg you to stop it. Footprints of Former Men in Far Cornwall|Robert S. Hawker One of the questions was, whether the malady called for blooding—a question that had divided opinion as long ago as 1658. A History of Epidemics in Britain, Volume II (of 2)|Charles Creighton After the blooding sleep very frequently followed, and a partial or sometimes a complete remission of the symptoms. A History of Epidemics in Britain, Volume II (of 2)|Charles Creighton Through the spring months the trench raids continued in their process of "blooding" the new army for the "big push." My Second Year of the War|Frederick Palmer
Huxham appears to have adopted the whole Sydenhamian practice of blooding, blistering, purging, and salivating. A History of Epidemics in Britain, Volume II (of 2)|Charles Creighton
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