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living
[ liv-ing ]
adjective
- having life; being alive; not dead:
living persons.
Antonyms: dead
- in actual existence or use; extant:
living languages.
a living faith.
Synonyms: flourishing, lively
- burning or glowing, as a coal.
- flowing freely, as water.
- pertaining to, suitable for, or sufficient for existence or subsistence:
living conditions; a living wage.
- of or relating to living persons:
within living memory.
- lifelike; true to life, as a picture or narrative.
- in its natural state and place; not uprooted, changed, etc.:
living rock.
- Informal. very; absolute (used as an intensifier):
You scared the living daylights out of me!
He's making her life a living hell.
noun
- the act or condition of a person or thing that lives:
Living is very expensive these days.
- the means of maintaining life; livelihood:
to earn one's living.
Synonyms: subsistence, sustenance
- a particular manner, state, or status of life:
luxurious living.
- Usually the living. (used with a plural verb) living persons collectively:
glad to be back among the living.
- British. the benefice of a member of the clergy.
living
/ ˈlɪvɪŋ /
adjective
- possessing life; not dead
- ( as collective noun preceded by the )
the living
- having the characteristics of life (used esp to distinguish organisms from nonliving matter)
- currently in use or valid
living language
- seeming to be real
a living image
- (of animals or plants) existing in the present age; extant Compare extinct
- geology another word for live 2
- presented by actors before a live audience
living theatre
- prenominal (intensifier)
the living daylights
noun
- the condition of being alive
- the manner in which one conducts one's life
fast living
- the means, esp the financial means, whereby one lives
- Church of England another term for benefice
- modifier of, involving, or characteristic of everyday life
living area
- modifier of or involving those now alive (esp in the phrase living memory )
Other Words From
- living·ly adverb
- living·ness noun
- non·living adjective noun
- quasi-living adjective
- un·living adjective
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
His prototype for Goat is Alto Pharmacy, a booming digital health unicorn today that the founders started in his living room.
It didn’t take long for the Wrecking Ball of Consequence to come swinging into the Houston Rockets’ living room.
This ensures your CTV ads are delivering an experience that is traditionally only found in the living room, watching network television.
As much as Netflix may be a tree in spirit, in reality, it’s not a living, interconnected organism.
We could raise the federal minimum wage, which hasn’t gone up in over 11 years, or incentivize businesses to pay their employees a living wage.
Patrick Klugman, the deputy mayor of Paris, said: “We are living our kind of 9/11,” he said.
Last week I turned 40, a bittersweet occasion because I crossed the line to living longer without my mother than with her.
But as an American creating a new brand here, and living the daily life of the souk, he seems to be in a league of his own.
A single father, he had been living abroad and returned when his mother was diagnosed with cancer.
For those living in poor communities in particular, interactions with police rarely come with good news and a smile.
To be so humbled in the knowledge of any living being, was the vultures of Prometheus to the proud heart of Ripperda.
The living (value £250) is in the gift of trustees, and is now held by the Rev. M. Parker, Vicar.
So far as their thought is still alive these men will come into the discussion of living questions now.
If they are still Moderns and alive, I defy you to bury them if you are discussing living questions in a full and honest way.
Either they are unavoidable if your living questions are fully discussed, or they are irrelevant and they do not matter.
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Related Words
When To Use
What are other ways to say living?
A person’s living is their means of maintaining life. How is this term different from livelihood and maintenance? Find out on Thesaurus.com.
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