same-blooded

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English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From same +‎ blooded.

Adjective

same-blooded (not comparable)

  1. Having the same blood or sharing identical blood lineages; consanguineous.
    • 1907, Frederic Crowinshield, Under the laurel:
      Uncharted, unbeknown to coroner Or him who heals, or maybe even those Who stand same-blooded round the open grave [...]
    • 1994, Mary Jane Salk, M. J. Cahill, Kingdoms:
      Cut from the same cloth, like-minded, same-blooded.
    • 2003, Gerald Hausman, Loretta Hausman, The mythology of horses:
      Naturally, the animals that so awed Sir Walter Raleigh were members of this same blooded stock.
    • 2015, Edin Hajdarpasic, Whose Bosnia?:
      In 1850, Ivan Franjo Jukic, a leading national activist in Bosnia, summed up these tensions thus: Bosnian Muslims are “the greatest enemies of their own people and their own same-blooded brothers.”

Derived terms