different between living vs bodily

living

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?l?v??/
  • Rhymes: -?v??

Verb

living

  1. present participle of live

Adjective

living (not comparable)

  1. Having life; alive.
    a living, breathing child
    Respect for the dead does not preclude respect for the living.
  2. In use or existing.
  3. Of everyday life.
  4. True to life.
  5. Of rock or stone, existing in its original state and place.
  6. This term needs a definition. Please help out and add a definition, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.
  7. Used as an intensifier.

Synonyms

  • (having life): extant, living, vital; see also Thesaurus:alive
  • (existing): extant; See also Thesaurus:existent
  • (representing life): lifey, lifelike, limned, lively, naturalistic
  • (intensifier): blasted, doggone, stinking; see also Thesaurus:damned

Antonyms

  • dead
  • nonliving

Hyponyms

  • long-living
  • longest-living

Related terms

Related terms

  • live, life
  • alive

Translations

Noun

living (countable and uncountable, plural livings)

  1. (uncountable) The state of being alive.
  2. Financial means; a means of maintaining life; livelihood
    What do you do for a living?
  3. A style of life.
    plain living
  4. (canon law) A position in a church (usually the Church of England) that has attached to it a source of income; an ecclesiastical benefice.

Derived terms

  • it takes a heap of living to make a house a home
  • make a living

Translations


Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from French living or less plausibly an independent truncated borrowing from English living room.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?l?.v??/
  • Hyphenation: li?ving

Noun

living m (plural livings)

  1. (Belgium) A living room.
    Synonyms: huiskamer, woonkamer

French

Etymology

From English.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /li.vi?/

Noun

living m (plural livings)

  1. living room

Italian

Etymology

From English living room.

Noun

living m (plural living)

  1. living room
    Synonym: soggiorno

Spanish

Etymology

From English [[living room#English|living (room)]].

Noun

living m (plural livings)

  1. (Argentina) living room
    Synonym: sala de estar

living From the web:

  • what living things use cellular respiration
  • what living things need carbon dioxide
  • what living thing lives the longest
  • what living things use photosynthesis
  • what living things don't need oxygen
  • what living things need
  • what living things perform cellular respiration
  • what living things are prokaryotes


bodily

English

Etymology

body +? -ly

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?b?d?li/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?b?d?li/
  • Hyphenation: bod?i?ly
  • Homophone: bawdily (in accents with the cot-caught merger)

Adjective

bodily (comparative more bodily, superlative most bodily)

  1. Of, relating to, or concerning the body.
  2. Having a body or material form; physical; corporeal.
    • May 14, 1709, Isaac Bickerstaff (pseudonym for Richard Steele or (in some later numbers of the journal) Joseph Addison), The Tatler No. 15
  3. Real; actual; put into execution.

Synonyms

  • corporal
  • corporeal

Translations

Adverb

bodily (not comparable)

  1. In bodily form; physically, corporally.
  2. Pertaining to the whole body or mass; wholly.
    • 1859, Charles Dickens, The Haunted House:
      The papering of one side of the room had dropped down bodily, with fragments of plaster adhering to it, and almost blocked up the door.
  3. Forcefully, vigorously.
    He was thrown bodily out of the house.

Synonyms

  • bodyaciously (obsolete, dialect, rare)

Translations

bodily From the web:

  • what bodily fluids carry pathogens
  • what bodily fluids can i donate for money
  • what bodily fluids contain covid
  • what bodily fluids transmit stds
  • what bodily system are the gonads part of
  • what bodily injury coverage means
  • what bodily fluids are infectious
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