livid (Meaning)
livid (s)
anemic looking from illness or emotion
(of a light) imparting a deathlike luminosity
furiously angry
discolored by coagulation of blood beneath the skin
livid (a.)
Black and blue; grayish blue; of a lead color; discolored, as flesh by contusion.
Synonyms & Antonyms of livid
Synonyms:
- contentious
- resentful
- acrid
- touchy
- worked up
- sizzling
- horn-mad
- distant
- huffy
- roiled
- bilious
- embittered
- ireful
- going crook
- smoldering
- boiling
- vengeful
- cranky
- querulous
- ticked
- unfriendly
- disapproving
- acrimonious
- belligerent
- crabby
- frigid
- antipathetic
- vindictive
- fretful
- churlish
- antisocial
- testy
- teed off
- snappish
- rancorous
- cold
- virulent
- icy
- malevolent
- sulky
- inimical
- vitriolic
- disagreeable
- cheesed off
- burning
- petulant
- antagonistic
- cool
- stormy
- in a fume
- ranting
- seething
- exasperated
- grouchy
- cross
- perturbed
- spiteful
- ornery
- dyspeptic
- unpleasant
- smouldering
- grumpy
- pugnacious
- aggravated
- cantankerous
- peevish
- raving
- bristly
- bristling
- enflamed
- riley
- wrought (up)
- bitter
- inflammable
- irascible
- hopping
- steamed up
Antonyms:
livid Sentence Examples
- The customer was livid with rage when he discovered the erroneous charges on his bill.
- The teacher's face turned livid when she found out that her students had been cheating on the test.
- The victim was livid with pain after suffering severe burns.
- The livid bruise on his arm testified to the severity of the assault.
- The judge was livid with anger when the defendant showed disrespect in court.
- The traffic warden was livid when he saw the driver parked illegally in the disabled bay.
- The parents were livid with worry after their child went missing.
- The politician's speech left his opponents livid with resentment.
- The livid sky at sunset hinted at the coming storm.
- The patient's livid complexion indicated a serious medical condition.
FAQs About the word livid
anemic looking from illness or emotion, (of a light) imparting a deathlike luminosity, furiously angry, discolored by coagulation of blood beneath the skinBlack
mad, infuriate, ballistic, outraged, furious, enraged, angered, infuriated, indignant,angry
friendly, agreeable, pleased, delighted, accepting, friendly, happy, sympathetic, agreeable, happy
The customer was livid with rage when he discovered the erroneous charges on his bill.
The teacher's face turned livid when she found out that her students had been cheating on the test.
The victim was livid with pain after suffering severe burns.
The livid bruise on his arm testified to the severity of the assault.