Old English blōdig(see blood, -y)mid 17th cent.: from bloodyThe use of bloodyto add emphasis to an expression is of uncertain origin, but is thought to have a connection with the ‘bloods’ (aristocratic rowdies) of the late 17th and early 18th centuries; hence the phrase bloody drunk(= as drunk as a blood) meant ‘very drunk indeed’ . After the mid 18th cent. until quite recently bloodyused as a swear word was regarded as unprintable, probably from the mistaken belief that it implied a blasphemous reference to the blood of Christ, or that the word was an alteration of ‘by Our Lady’; hence a widespread caution in using the term even in phrases such as bloody battlemerely referring to bloodshed
英英释义网络释义
noun
1.having or covered with or accompanied by blood;
a bloody nose
2.(used of persons) informal intensifiers;
what a bally (or blinking) nuisance
3.extremely;
you are bloody right
vern
1.cover with blood;
bloody your hands
-bloody
1 . 血性
If you a bloodynipple discharge outflow , it is more dangerous ., 如果乳头有血性分泌物流出 , 那就更危险.