ADJECTIVE
-
endowed with or exhibiting great bodily or mental health
a hearty glow of health
How To Use red-blooded In A Sentence
- A random trawl of the heroes of the past two decades proves how hard it is to find red-blooded guys.
- This is very flattering for any red-blooded British banger. The Sun
- I defy any red-blooded person to remain dry-eyed at the final moments of the piece.
- All red-blooded males should arrange to see this film now.
- But just look at him… how could any red-blooded woman not be totally cuckoo?
- What red-blooded woman wouldn't have done the same? The Sun
- As any red-blooded male should, I found myself admiring her form in the many varied outfits she wore throughout the film.
- Many an aspiring, red-blooded young actor might have considered that as the pinnacle of their careers. Times, Sunday Times
- The very sight of him hovering diffidently in the corner of a room - with his beard and his home-trimmed hair and his schoolboyish little collar poking out of the top of his hand-knitted sweater and his palpable conscientious desperation not to cause any offence to anyone whatsoever - could make a red-blooded woman lose the will to live. Woodcraft Folk Memories
- “To those red-blooded Americans who signed up to fight somebody and arrived in Ceylon to find themselves pinioned beneath P Division directives, the SEAC situation was just another form of British tyranny—frustration without representation,” she wrote. A Covert Affair