Blithe
adjective, blither, blithest.
before 1000; Middle English; Old English blīthe; cognate with Old Norse blīthr, Old High German blīdi, Gothic bleiths
noun
Sr. | English Words | Urdu Words |
1 | BLITHE | خوش باش خوش خوش ۔ |
2 | BLITHE Adjective | بے فِکرا۔ خُوش مزاج ۔ مسرُور۔ زِندہ دِل |
3 | BLITHE Adjective | بے فِکرا ۔ خُوش مِزاج ۔ |
4 | BLITHELY Adverb | بے فکری سے ۔ خوُشی سے ۔ زندہ دِلی سے۔ |
5 | BLITHELY Adverb | بے فِکری سے ۔ زِندَہ دِلی سے ۔ |
blithe
[blahyth, blahyth]
1.
joyous, merry, or gay in disposition; glad; cheerful:
Everyone loved her for her blithe spirit.
2.
without thought or regard; carefree; heedless:
a blithe indifference to anyone's feelings.
blitheful, adjective
blithefully, adverb
blithely, adverb
blitheness, noun
overblithe, adjective
1. happy, mirthful, sprightly, light-hearted, buoyant, joyful, blithesome.
1. joyless.
Blithe
[blahyth, blahyth]
1.
a female given name.
adj.
Old English bliþe "joyous, kind, cheerful, pleasant," from Proto-Germanic *blithiz "gentle, kind" (cf. Old Saxon bliði "bright, happy," Middle Dutch blide, Dutch blijde, Old Norse bliðr "mild, gentle," Old High German blidi "gay, friendly," Gothic bleiþs "kind, friendly, merciful").
Rare since 16c. No cognates outside Germanic. "The earlier application was to the outward expression of kindly feeling, sympathy, affection to others, as in Gothic and ON.; but in OE. the word had come more usually to be applied to the external manifestation of one's own pleased or happy frame of mind, and hence even to the state itself." [OED]
Rare since 16c. No cognates outside Germanic. "The earlier application was to the outward expression of kindly feeling, sympathy, affection to others, as in Gothic and ON.; but in OE. the word had come more usually to be applied to the external manifestation of one's own pleased or happy frame of mind, and hence even to the state itself." [OED]
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