"Bloody" refers to the blood of Christ on the cross. That is why it is unacceptable in polite conversation as a mere dismissive, like the f-word.
Bloody can mean several things - here's what the Princeton online dictionary has to say:
I know a few people who constantly use the word and to me the word bloody is used like a replacement curse word so-to-speak. Its like when you get real angry at something but you don't want to curse like : darn, flip, shucks, shoots, frig that kinda a way like how my bloody computer is freaking out right now.
I can give you several sentences.
You can also use the English slang, as in "That bloody idiot crashed my car!"
no, deffinetley not! whoever says it is, is a simplton
The Brits use the word "bloody" to describe many things. Examples: That movie was bloody good. Or, that food was bloody terrible.
There was a 'bloody' crime scene.
Bloody - meaning lots of blood !
His nose was bloody from the attack.
Why don't those bloody kids just go home.
The police took a photograph of the bloody fingerprints.
"Bled" is the past tense of the word "bleed", meaning to drain of blood.
a color that is as red as blood.
bluddy
The word 'bloody' is not a noun; the word 'bloody' is an adjective (bloody, bloodier, bloodiest) and a verb(bloody, bloodies, blooding, bloodied).
Blooming is an alternative to the British word 'bloody', which is an exclamation of surprise or just as an emphasise on a sentence ('bloody hell!') For example: 'She wants me to go to the shop now? No blooming chance!'
i dunno what weary prose means i want to know actually bloody hell
Say what you mean and mean what you say. Give it to them straight! This is an emphatic way of saying "Call a spade a spade," which means "Don't use any fancy language or flowery terms to try to make the situation look better than it is." "Bloody" is a mildly offensive curse word used in the UK and Australia.
Yes, bloody is an adjective because it is an describing word; as in blue, or hairy, or bloody. *Numbers also count as adjectives.
nothing
the word bloody is only used to emphasize something, such as, "that was a bloody good fruit basket we had for lunch." Or, that new vehicle was running bloody well.
that its raw
no ,no it does not
what do you mean the bloody placards
the name halle mean bloody Mary
Raw, bloody; bleeding.
wheres the bloody answer
That you are a bloody freak
it could mean he is in a bad mood or distressed with what is happening
bloody grounds
it means darn, wretched, bloody, cursed.