Her blithe personality fits her just right.
She greeted everyone with a blithe smile, oblivious to the troubles around her.
She sure is blithe spirit!
"His blithe manner disguised a deep-seated fear of failure." "The blithe teenagers of the 1960s often became hapless parents themselves by the 1980s." "Watson still marveled at the blithe disregard Holmes had for deadly peril."
The fairies danced blithely in the flowering meadow.
The man was very blithe about the break up with his girlfriend, because they had not been dating for barely a week.
Jill was frustrated by her friend Tom's blithe attitude toward the problems she was having with her boss. Blithe is an adjective.
It is correct. The basic sentence is, "Worker is lazy." The subject is "worker". The connecting verb is "is", and the predicate adjective is, "lazy". "The" modifies "factory's", and "The factory's" modifies "resident". "The factory's resident" and "blithe" modify worker and "not" modifies "lazy". Of course the use of "not" to modify "lazy" changes the entire meaning of the sentence.
(Blithe can mean carefree/lighthearted, or casual/showing a lack of due concern.)"The blithe atmosphere of the city was soon lost to the war.""He spoke with blithe ignorance of the true situation.""Her blithe manner seemed unusual given the desperate circumstance we were in."When she spoke to Janice, not knowing that Janice's heart was broken, Eva's comments sounded blithe and callous.
Percy Shelley's poem,'To a Skylark', opens with the line,'Hail to thee, blithe spirit!'.
Blithe Spirit was written in 1941
Albert Blithe was born on 1923-06-25.
Albert Blithe died on 1967-12-17.