|
|
1. (adj.) warm-blooded
of or designating animals, as mammals and birds, having a body temperature that is relatively constant and independent of the environment.
2. warm-blooded
ardent; impetuous:
warm-blooded valor.
Etymology: (1785–95)
|
| Definition of 'Warm-blooded' |
Princeton's WordNet |
|
1. (adj) warm-blooded
having warm blood (in animals whose body temperature is internally regulated)
|
| Definition of 'Warm-blooded' |
Webster Dictionary |
|
1. (adj) Warm-blooded
having warm blood; -- applied especially to those animals, as birds and mammals, which have warm blood, or, more properly, the power of maintaining a nearly uniform temperature whatever the temperature of the surrounding air. See Homoiothermal
|
|
|
Sense: having a blood temperature greater than that of the surrounding atmosphere
warm-blooded animals such as man.
|
Afrikaans: warmbloedig |
Arabic: ذو دَمٍ حار |
Bulgarian: топлокръвен |
Brazilian: sangue quente / ardente |
Czech: teplokrevný |
German: warmblütig |
Danish: varmblodet |
Greek: θερμόαιμος |
Spanish: de sangre caliente |
Estonian: püsisoojane |
Farsi: خون گرم |
Finnish: tasalämpöinen |
French: à sang chaud |
Hebrew: בַּעַל דַם חַם |
Hindi: नियततापी |
Croatian: toplokrvni |
Hungarian: melegvérű |
Indonesian: berdarah panas |
Icelandic: með jafnheitt blóð |
Italian: a sangue caldo |
Japanese: 温血の |
Korean: 온혈의 |
Lithuanian: šiltakraujis |
Latvian: siltasiņu- |
Malay: berdarah panas |
Dutch: warmbloedig |
Norwegian: varmblodig |
Polish: ciepłokrwisty |
Portuguese: de sangue quente |
Romanian: cu sânge cald |
Russian: теплокровный |
Slovak: teplokrvný |
Slovenian: toplokrven |
Serbian: toplokrvan |
Swedish: varmblodig |
Thai: ที่มีเลือดอุ่น |
Turkish: sıcakkanlı |
Taiwanese: 熱血的 |
Ukrainian: теплокровний |
Urdu: گرم خون والے جانور |
Vietnamese: có máu nóng |
Chinese: 热血的 |
Get even more translations for Warm-blooded...
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Alternative search options for 'Warm-blooded' |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|