Inclined to a healthy reddish color often associated with outdoor life.
Elaborately or excessively ornamented.
1 The really dreadful ones clap after a particular florid passage of music.
2 Such activities were more in line with florid , excitable countries like Italy.
3 Sembrich made inevitable the operas of the florid Italian school, and Mme.
4 Our Mr Swann is also given to florid outbursts of baroque vulgarity.
5 Darker grew his florid countenance; his bulging eyes looked troubled and perplexed.
6 Every sentence led the florid practitioner farther and farther into the infinite.
7 He cast; the lowest number fell to Parkhurst, a florid , full-blooded Texan.
8 The style of his letters also was very regular, and slightly florid .
9 After the florid demonstration the raiders galloped away, yelling, down the river.
10 I saw her sharp-cut, florid face in profile, steadily bent and smelling.
11 The momentary convulsion of his florid physiognomy seemed to strike them dumb.
12 The florid little Lord of Gavrillac stood almost defiantly to receive him.
13 The outside pattern is a florid arabesque, reminding one of a fungus.
14 He was an artist, but too florid , too decadent in his decorations.
15 I remembered that the stranger had a florid complexion; was this rouge?
16 Pierre du Pont. Spanish inherently gives such florid sounds to ordinary names.
Другие примеры для термина "florid"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Florid в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки