Definition

Livid refers to someone who is extremely angry or furious, often to the point of being visibly discolored or turning red. It can also describe someone who is pale and sickly-looking, often as a result of illness or shock.

Pronunciation

US English

UK English


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Excerpts from News Articles

1

One retired judge – a Republican appointee – told CNN that the disclosure of the trips made them “ livid .”

Logo 2023-04-07 CNN News

2

Weenarin is livid that even people in the north, most affected by the seasonal smog, rarely protest. There are exceptions – on April 10, about 1,700 Chiang Mai residents filed a lawsuit against the government, alleging negligence – but most actions are piecemeal and do not aim to hold the agriculture industry or the government to account.

Logo 2023-04-12 Al Jazeera

3

Indeed. Of course, to develop the attitude of a rock toward insults takes time and practice, but I’m getting better at it. So what did I do in response to the above-mentioned rant? I behaved like a rock. I simply ignored it, focusing my energy instead on answering genuine questions from others, doing my best to engage them in constructive conversations. As a result, said prominent author, I’m told, is livid with rage, while I retained my serenity.


4

The alterations became law after the text was published before dawn in France's official journal, with the livid opposition claiming that Macron had moved to smuggle it through in the depth of the night.

Logo 2023-04-16 Channel NewsAsia

5

Dominion says this distinction may have narrowed what Fox turned over as part of the discovery process in the case – potentially blocking the voting technology company from obtaining more Murdoch-related emails and text messages. The judge was livid over Fox’s misrepresentations and said he would bring in a third-party lawyer to investigate whether Fox lied to the court and withheld evidence from Dominion.

Logo 2023-04-15 CNN News

6

O’Neill was livid — especially because it came from an Irish paper.

Logo 2023-04-14 The Washington Post

7

Thomas was livid . He issued a 25-page dissenting opinion that sided heavily with the anti-regulation stance taken by the Club for Growth and its rightwing allies. Thomas began his opinion by breathlessly accusing his fellow justices of upholding “what can only be described as the most significant abridgment of the freedoms of speech and association since the civil war”.

Logo 2023-04-20 The Guardian

8

Ms Tsai's meeting with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy in the US prompted a livid China to launch three days of war games in the waters around Taiwan.

Logo 2023-04-25 The Independent

9

GOP leaders, meanwhile, were left livid that the White House had once again brushed aside their opening bid — still refusing to meet with McCarthy on the debt limit.

Logo 2023-04-27 Politico

10

“One day, you know, he would be in a very, very happy mood,” Wilkerson said. “The next day he would read something in the paper and just yell, just be livid . That’s who we were dealing with.”

Logo 2023-04-29 The Washington Post

11

Mexico’s army leadership was livid . López Obrador had become more dependent on the military for everything from fighting crime groups to building airports. He accused the DEA of relying on flimsy evidence and questioned whether the agency was trying to weaken the Mexican government or its armed forces.

Logo 2023-04-29 The Washington Post