Possibly, unbloody or unbloodied.
The word 'bloody' is not a noun; the word 'bloody' is an adjective (bloody, bloodier, bloodiest) and a verb(bloody, bloodies, blooding, bloodied).
Yes, bloody is an adjective because it is an describing word; as in blue, or hairy, or bloody. *Numbers also count as adjectives.
"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:having or covered with or accompanied by blood; "a bloody nose"; "your scarf is all bloody"; "the effects will be violent and probably bloody"; "a ...extremely; "you are bloody right"; "Why are you so all-fired aggressive?"bally(a): informal intensifiers; "what a bally (or blinking) nuisance"; "a bloody fool"; "a crashing bore"; "you flaming idiot"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.
bloody
decisive battles change the course of war and history bloody battles do not
BLOOD
i really dont know...isnt it normal to eat bloody tampons
Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson was created in 2009.
The word 'bloody' is not a noun; the word 'bloody' is an adjective (bloody, bloodier, bloodiest) and a verb(bloody, bloodies, blooding, bloodied).
Both a bloody Mary and bloody Caesar contain vodka. The difference is that a bloody Mary is made with tomato juice and a bloody Caesar is made with Clamato juice.
bloody
Bloody
a shrimp that is bloody
No- but there are some bloody noses and very little bloody scratches.
it comes from bloody Mary it comes from bloody Mary it comes from bloody Mary
The word "bloody" can function as an adjective, an adverb, or an expletive (interjection).
Gushing, crimson, spewing