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in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology 1
From Middle English lyven , libben , from Old English lifian , libban ( “ to live; be alive ” ) , from Proto-West Germanic *libbjan , from Proto-Germanic *libjaną , from Proto-Indo-European *leyp- ( “ leave, cling, linger ” ) .
Cognate with Saterland Frisian líeuwje ( “ to live ” ) , West Frisian libje ( “ to live ” ) , Dutch leven ( “ to live ” ) , German Low German leven , lęven ( “ to live ” ) , German leben ( “ to live ” ) , Swedish leva ( “ to live ” ) , Icelandic lifa ( “ to live ” ) , Gothic 𐌻𐌹𐌱𐌰𐌽 ( liban , “ to live ” ) .
Pronunciation
Verb
live (third-person singular simple present lives , present participle living , simple past and past participle lived )
( intransitive ) To be alive ; to have life .
He's not expected to live for more than a few months.
( intransitive ) To have permanent residence somewhere, to inhabit , to reside .
I live at 2a Acacia Avenue. He lives in LA, but he's staying here over the summer.
1892 , Walter Besant , “Prologue: Who is Edmund Gray?”, in The Ivory Gate , New York, N.Y.: Harper & Brothers , , →OCLC , page 16 :Athelstan Arundel walked home all the way, foaming and raging. No omnibus, cab, or conveyance ever built could contain a young man in such a rage. His mother lived at Pembridge Square, which is four good measured miles from Lincoln's Inn.
1918 , W[illiam] B[abington] Maxwell , chapter X, in The Mirror and the Lamp , Indianapolis, Ind.: The Bobbs-Merrill Company , →OCLC :It was a joy to snatch some brief respite, and find himself in the rectory drawing–room. Listening here was as pleasant as talking; just to watch was pleasant. The young priests who lived here wore cassocks and birettas; their faces were fine and mild, yet really strong, like the rector's face; and in their intercourse with him and his wife they seemed to be brothers.
( intransitive , informal ) (of an object) to have its proper place; to normally be stored.
I washed your gravy boat. Where does it live ?
( intransitive ) To survive ; to persevere ; to continue .
1850 , [Alfred, Lord Tennyson ], In Memoriam , London: Edward Moxon , , →OCLC , Canto XXXI, page 50 :When Lazarus left his charnel-cave, And home to Mary’s house return’d, [ …] ‘Where wert thou, brother, those four days?’ There lives no record of reply, Which telling what it is to die Had surely added praise to praise.
( intransitive ) To endure in memory ; to escape oblivion .
Her memory lives in that song.
2017 March 14, Stuart James, “Leicester stun Sevilla to reach last eight after Kasper Schmeichel save”, in the Guardian :He has now overseen three straight victories since taking over from Claudio Ranieri and this latest win, against one of the best teams in Europe, will live long in the memory for every Leicester supporter.
( intransitive , hyperbolic ) To cope .
You'll just have to live with it! I can't live in a world without you.
( intransitive ) To pass life in a specified manner.
It is difficult to live in poverty. And they lived happily ever after.
( transitive ) To spend, as one's life; to pass; to maintain; to continue in, constantly or habitually.
To live an idle or a useful life.
2011 December 19, Kerry Brown, “Kim Jong-il obituary ”, in The Guardian :By 1980, South Korea had overtaken its northern neighbour, and was well on its way to being one of the Asian tigers – high-performing economies, with democratic movements ultimately winning power in the 1990s. The withdrawal of most Soviet aid in 1991, with the fall of the Soviet empire, pushed North Korea further down. Kim Il-sung had held a genuine place on North Korean people's affections. His son was regarded as a shadowy playboy, with rumours circulating over the years that he imported Russian and Chinese prostitutes, and lived a life of profligacy and excess.
2013 June 1, “Towards the end of poverty ”, in The Economist , volume 407 , number 8838 , page 11 :But poverty’s scourge is fiercest below $1.25 (the average of the 15 poorest countries’ own poverty lines, measured in 2005 dollars and adjusted for differences in purchasing power): people below that level live lives that are poor, nasty, brutish and short.
( transitive ) To act habitually in conformity with; to practice ; to exemplify in one's way of life .
2006 , Laura Cardone, Motivation at Work , →ISBN :Change happens from the inside out and this great resource can show you how to live the habits that build personal and professional effectiveness.
2016 March 24, Jon Henley, “The aggressive, outrageous, infuriating (and ingenious) rise of BrewDog”, in The Guardian , →ISSN :In short, he argues, in the modern era, “The only way to build a brand is to live that brand. You have to live the values and the mission, then let the customer decide.”
( transitive , obsolete ) To live as; to live being.
c. 1587–1588 , [Christopher Marlowe ], Tamburlaine the Great. The First Part , 2nd edition, part 1, London: Richard Iones, , published 1592 , →OCLC ; reprinted as Tamburlaine the Great (A Scolar Press Facsimile), Menston, Yorkshire, London: Scolar Press, 1973 , →ISBN , Act I, scene ii :at leaſt admit vs libertie, Euen as thou hopſt to be eternized, By liuing Aſias mightie Emperour.
( intransitive ) To outlast danger; to float (said of a ship, boat, etc).
No ship could live in such a storm.
c. 1601–1602 (date written) , William Shakespeare , “Twelfe Night, or What You Will ”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies (First Folio ), London: Isaac Iaggard , and Ed Blount , published 1623 , →OCLC , :a strong mast that lived upon the sea
( intransitive , followed by on , upon , or by ) To maintain or support one's existence; to provide for oneself; to feed ; to subsist .
It is hard to live on the minimum wage. They lived on stale bread. Man shall not live by bread alone.
( intransitive , informal ) To make the most of life; to experience a full , rich life .
I'm sick of spending every day studying at home: I want to go out there and live !
Usage notes
Throughout Late Middle English and Early Modern English in Midlands and Northern dialects, the present participle form livand co-occurs with the form living .
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
be alive
Afar: mare
Afrikaans: leef (af)
Albanian: jetoj (sq)
Arabic: حَيِيَ ( ḥayiya ) , عَاشَ ( ʕāša )
Egyptian Arabic: عَاش ( ʕāš )
Aragonese: bibir (an)
Armenian: ապրել (hy) ( aprel )
Old Armenian: կեամ ( keam )
Aromanian: bãnedz , bãnedzu
Asturian: vivir (ast)
Azerbaijani: yaşamaq (az)
Bashkir: йәшәү ( yəşəw )
Basque: bizi izan
Belarusian: жыць impf ( žycʹ )
Berber:
Tashelhit: ddr
Breton: beva
Bulgarian: живе́я (bg) impf ( živéja )
Burmese: ရှင် (my) ( hrang )
Carpathian Rusyn: жыти impf ( žŷty )
Catalan: viure (ca)
Chechen: даха ( daxa )
Cherokee: ᎬᎿ ( gvhna )
Chinese:
Mandarin: 生 (zh) ( shēng ) , 生活 (zh) ( shēnghuó ) , 活 (zh) ( huó )
Coptic:
Bohairic: ⲱⲛϧ ( ōnx )
Sahidic, Fayyumic: ⲱⲛϩ ( ōnh )
Cornish: bewa
Crimean Tatar: yaşamaq
Czech: žít (cs) impf
Danish: leve (da)
Dutch: leven (nl)
Egyptian: (ꜥnḫ )
Esperanto: vivi (eo)
Estonian: elama (et)
Even: бидэй ( ʙidəj ) , индэй ( indəj )
Evenki: бими ( bimi ) , инми ( inmi )
Faroese: liva (fo)
Finnish: elää (fi) , olla elossa
Franco-Provençal: vivre
French: vivre (fr)
Friulian: vivi
Galician: vivir (gl)
Georgian: სიცოცხლე ( sicocxle ) , ცხოვრება ( cxovreba )
German: leben (de)
Gothic: 𐌻𐌹𐌱𐌰𐌽 ( liban )
Greek: ζω (el) ( zo )
Ancient: ζάω ( záō ) , ζῶ ( zô )
Greenlandic: inuuvoq
Haitian Creole: viv
Hebrew: חַי (he) ( kháy )
Hindi: जीना (hi) ( jīnā )
Hungarian: él (hu)
Icelandic: lifa (is)
Ido: vivar (io)
Indonesian: hidup (id)
Ingush: ваха ( vaxa )
Irish: mair , bí beo , bí i do bheatha
Italian: vivere (it)
Japanese: 生きる (ja) ( いきる, ikiru ) , 暮らす (ja) ( くらす, kurasu ) ( spend time, get along )
Javanese: urip (jv)
Kamkata-viri: ǰūa
Kannada: ಬದುಕು (kn) ( baduku )
Kashubian: żec
Kazakh: өмір сүру ( ömır süru ) , тұру (kk) ( tūru )
Khmer: នៅ (km) ( nɨw ) , រស់ (km) ( rŭəh )
Korean: 살다 (ko) ( salda )
Kumyk: яшамакъ ( yaşamaq )
Kunigami: 生ちちゅん ( ひちちゅん, hichichun )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: ژِیان (ckb) ( jiyan )
Northern Kurdish: jîyan (ku)
Kyrgyz: өмүр сүрүү (ky) ( ömür sürüü ) , жашоо (ky) ( jaşoo )
Laboya: morha
Ladin: viver
Lao: ທຽວສົງສານ ( thiāu song sān )
Latgalian: dzeivuot
Latin: vivo (la) , vigeo
Latvian: dzīvot (lv)
Lithuanian: gyventi (lt)
Lombard: viv (lmo)
Low German:
German Low German: leven
Lushootseed: həliʔ
Luxembourgish: liewen
Macedonian: живее impf ( živee )
Malay: hidup (ms)
Malayalam: ജീവിക്കുക (ml) ( jīvikkuka )
Maltese: għex
Manchu: ᠪᠠᠨᠵᡳᠮᠪᡳ ( banjimbi )
Mauritian Creole: viv
Mbyá Guaraní: iko
Middle English: lyven
Miyako: 生きーㇲ゙ ( いきーㇲ゙, ikīz )
Mòcheno: lem
Mongolian:
Cyrillic: амьдрах (mn) ( amʹdrax )
Nanai: би- ( bi- )
Navajo: hiná
Neapolitan: campà
Nepali: जिउनु ( jiunu )
Norman: vivre
North Frisian:
Föhr-Amrum: lewe
Mooring: laawe
Northern Amami Ōshima: 生きみゅり ( いきみゅり, ikimyuri )
Northern Sami: eallit
Norwegian:
Bokmål: leve (no)
Nynorsk: leva (nn)
Occitan: viure (oc)
Ojibwe: bimaadizi
Okinawan: 生ちちゅん ( いちちゅん, ichichun )
Old Church Slavonic:
Cyrillic: жити impf ( žiti )
Old East Slavic: жити impf ( žiti )
Old English: libban
Old Norse: lifa
Old Swedish: liva
Oromo: jiraachuu
Papiamentu: biba
Persian:
Classical Persian: زِنْدَگِی کَرْدَن (fa) ( zindagī kardan )
Dari: زِنْدَگِی کَرْدَن (fa) ( zindagī kardan ) , زِنْدَه گِی کَرْدَن ( zinda gī kardan )
Iranian Persian: زِنْدِگی کَرْدَن (fa) ( zendegi kardan ) , زیسْتَن (fa) ( zistan )
Piedmontese: vive
Polish: żyć (pl) impf
Portuguese: viver (pt)
Purepecha: irekani
Quechua: kawsay (qu) , kausai , kawai
Rapa Nui: ora
Romani: ʒivel , traisarel
Romanian: trăi (ro)
Romansch: viver
Russian: жить (ru) impf ( žitʹ ) , прожи́ть (ru) pf ( prožítʹ )
Saho: mare
Sanskrit: जीवति (sa) ( jī́vati )
Sardinian: campai , vívere , bívere
Scots: leeve
Scottish Gaelic: bi beò
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: ( Ekavian ) жи́вети impf , ( Ijekavian ) жи́вјети impf
Roman: ( Ekavian ) žíveti (sh) impf , ( Ijekavian ) žívjeti (sh) impf
Sicilian: campari (scn) , vìviri (scn)
Sinhalese: ජීවත් වෙනවා ( jīwat wenawā )
Slovak: žiť impf
Slovene: živéti (sl) impf
Somali: noolasho
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: žywy byś impf , žywiś se impf
Sotho: phela (st)
Spanish: vivir (es)
Sundanese: jumeneng
Swahili: ishi (sw)
Swedish: leva (sv)
Tagalog: mabuhay (tl)
Tajik: зиндагӣ кардан ( zindagi kardan )
Tamil: வாழ் (ta) ( vāḻ )
Tatar: яшәргә (tt) ( yaşärgä )
Tetum: moris
Thai: มีชีวิต ( mii-chii-wít ) , อยู่ (th) ( yùu )
Tocharian A: śo-
Tocharian B: śai-
Turkish: yaşamak (tr)
Turkmen: ýaşamak
Ukrainian: жи́ти (uk) impf ( žýty )
Urdu: جِینا ( jīnā )
Uyghur: ياشىماق ( yashimaq )
Uzbek: yashamoq (uz)
Venetan: viver , vìvar
Vietnamese: sống (vi)
Võro: elämä
Walloon: viker (wa)
Welsh: byw (cy)
West Frisian: libje
Yiddish: לעבן ( lebn )
Yucatec Maya: kuxtal
Zealandic: leve
ǃXóõ: ǃnúm sg , ǃnûɲa pl
have permanent residence
Afrikaans: woon (af)
Albanian: banoj (sq)
Arabic: سَكَنَ ( sakana ) , عَاشَ ( ʕāša ) , أَقَامَ ( ʔaqāma )
Armenian: ապրել (hy) ( aprel )
Asturian: vivir (ast)
Azerbaijani: yaşamaq (az) , qalmaq (az)
Bashkir: тороу ( torow )
Belarusian: жыць impf ( žycʹ ) , пражыва́ць impf ( pražyvácʹ )
Bulgarian: живе́я (bg) impf ( živéja )
Burmese: နေ (my) ( ne )
Catalan: viure (ca)
Chechen: даха ( daxa )
Cherokee: ᎡᎯ ( ehi )
Chinese:
Cantonese: 住 ( zyu6 ) , 居住 ( geoi1 zyu6 )
Dungan: җў ( žw )
Mandarin: 住 (zh) ( zhù ) , 居住 (zh) ( jūzhù )
Cornish: bos trigys
Czech: žít (cs) impf , bydlet (cs) impf
Danish: bo (da)
Dutch: wonen (nl)
Elfdalian: byddja
Esperanto: loĝi (eo)
Estonian: elama (et)
Faroese: búgva
Finnish: asua (fi) , elää (fi)
French: habiter (fr) , demeurer (fr)
Georgian: ცხოვრება ( cxovreba )
German: wohnen (de) , leben (de)
Gothic: 𐌱𐌰𐌿𐌰𐌽 ( bauan )
Greek: μένω (el) ( méno )
Ancient: οἰκέω ( oikéō )
Greenlandic: najugaqarpoq
Haitian Creole: rete
Hebrew: גָּר (he) ( gar )
Hindi: रहना (hi) ( rahnā ) , निवास करना ( nivās karnā ) , बसना (hi) ( basnā )
Hungarian: lakik (hu)
Hunsrik: wohne
Icelandic: búa (is) , eiga heima
Ido: rezidar (io)
Indonesian: tinggal (id)
Ingush: ваха ( vaxa )
Interlingua: habitar
Irish: cónaigh , bí i do chónaí
Italian: abitare (it)
Japanese: 住む (ja) ( すむ, sumu ) , 居住する (ja) ( きょじゅうする, kyojū suru )
Kazakh: тұру (kk) ( tūru )
Khmer: រស់ (km) ( rŭəh )
Korean: 살다 (ko) ( salda ) , 거주하다 (ko) ( geojuhada )
Kumyk: яшамакъ ( yaşamaq )
Kurdish:
Northern Kurdish: jîn (ku) , jiyan (ku)
Kyrgyz: туруу (ky) ( turuu )
Lao: ຢູ່ ( yū ) , ອາໄສ ( ʼā sai ) , ເນົາ ( nao ) , ຕັ້ງ ( tang )
Latin: vivo (la) , incolo , habito (la)
Latvian: dzīvot (lv)
Lithuanian: gyventi (lt)
Low German:
German Low German: wahnen
Luxembourgish: wunnen (lb)
Malay: tinggal (ms) , duduk (ms) , semayam ( royalty )
Malayalam: ജീവിക്കുക (ml) ( jīvikkuka ) , താമസിക്കുക (ml) ( tāmasikkuka )
Manchu: ᡨᡝᠮᠪᡳ ( tembi )
Mbyá Guaraní: iko
Middle English: lyven
Mongolian:
Cyrillic: амьдрах (mn) ( amʹdrax ) , орших (mn) ( oršix )
Norman: d'meuther
North Frisian:
Föhr-Amrum: wene
Mooring: booge
Northern Sami: orrut , ássat
Norwegian:
Bokmål: bo (no) bu (no)
Nynorsk: bu
Nuosu: ꀀ ( it )
Old English: wunian , libban
Pashto: ژوند کول ( žwənd kawəl )
Persian:
Classical Persian: زِنْدَگِی کَرْدَن (fa) ( zindagī kardan )
Iranian Persian: زِنْدِگی کَرْدَن (fa) ( zendegi kardan )
Polish: mieszkać (pl) impf
Portuguese: viver (pt) , morar (pt)
Purepecha: irekani
Quechua: tiyai , taai
Romani: beśel
Romanian: a locui (ro) , a trăi (ro) , a avea locuință
Romansch: star , abitar
Russian: жить (ru) impf ( žitʹ ) , прожива́ть (ru) impf ( proživátʹ )
Sanskrit: क्षेति ( kṣeti ) , वसति (sa) ( vasati )
Scots: bide
Scottish Gaelic: fuirich , còmhnaich
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: ( Ekavian ) жи́вети impf , ( Ijekavian ) жи́вјети impf , стано̀вати impf
Roman: ( Ekavian ) žíveti (sh) impf , ( Ijekavian ) žívjeti (sh) impf , stanòvati (sh) impf
Slovak: žiť impf , bývať impf
Slovene: živéti (sl) impf
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: bydliś impf
Upper Sorbian: bydlić impf
Sotho: dula (st)
Spanish: vivir (es) , morar (es) ( literary )
Swahili: ishi (sw)
Swedish: bo (sv)
Tagalog: manirahan
Tajik: зиндагӣ кардан ( zindagi kardan )
Telugu: నివసించు (te) ( nivasiñcu )
Tetum: horik
Thai: อยู่ (th) ( yùu ) , อาศัย (th) ( aa-sǎi )
Tocharian B: walāk-
Turkish: yaşamak (tr) , oturmak (tr)
Turkmen: ýaşamak
Ukrainian: жи́ти (uk) impf ( žýty ) , прожива́ти (uk) impf ( prožyváty ) , ме́шкати (uk) impf ( méškaty )
Urdu: رَہْنا ( rahnā ) , بَسْنا ( basnā )
Uyghur: ياشىماق ( yashimaq ) , تۇرماق ( turmaq )
Uzbek: yashamoq (uz) , turmoq (uz)
Venetan: star (vec)
Vietnamese: ở (vi) , sống (vi)
Vilamovian: wönn
Walloon: dimorer (wa) , dimani (wa)
Welsh: byw (cy)
West Frisian: wenje (fy)
Yiddish: וווינען ( voynen )
Zealandic: weune
Zhuang: youq
ǃXóõ: ǃnúm sg , ǃnûɲa pl
survive, persevere, continue
Afrikaans: oorleef
Arabic: يَنْجُو ( yanjū )
Armenian: ապրե ( apre )
Belarusian: перажыва́ць impf ( pjeražyvácʹ ) , перажы́ць pf ( pjeražýcʹ )
Bulgarian: преживя́вам (bg) impf ( preživjávam ) , преживе́я pf ( preživéja )
Burmese: အသက်ရှင် ( a.sakhrang )
Catalan: viure (ca)
Chinese:
Mandarin: 生存 (zh) ( shēngcún ) , 存活 (zh) ( cúnhuó )
Czech: žít (cs) , přežívat impf , přežít (cs) pf
Danish: overleve (da)
Dutch: verderleven , overleven (nl) , voortbestaan (nl)
Finnish: elää (fi) , selvitä (fi)
Georgian: please add this translation if you can
German: überleben (de)
Greek: επιζώ (el) ( epizó ) , επιβιώνω (el) ( epivióno )
Kazakh: өмір сүру ( ömır süru )
Kurdish:
Northern Kurdish: jîn (ku) , jiyan (ku)
Latin: vivo (la)
Malayalam: അതിജീവിക്കുക (ml) ( atijīvikkuka )
Manchu: ᡨᠠᡴᠰᡳᠮᠪᡳ ( taksimbi )
Middle English: lyven
Polish: przetrwać (pl) pf , przeżyć (pl) pf
Portuguese: sobreviver (pt) , perseverar (pt)
Romanian: a supraviețui (ro)
Russian: выжива́ть (ru) impf ( vyživátʹ ) , вы́жить (ru) pf ( výžitʹ )
Scottish Gaelic: mair
Slovak: prežiť pf , zažiť pf , prežívať impf
Slovene: živeti (sl) , preživeti (sl) pf
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: žywy byś impf
Swahili: ishi (sw)
Swedish: leva (sv)
Turkish: yaşamak (tr)
Ukrainian: пережива́ти impf ( perežyváty ) , пережи́ти (uk) pf ( perežýty ) , вижива́ти impf ( vyžyváty ) , ви́жити pf ( výžyty )
Walloon: riviker (wa)
Welsh: byw (cy)
spend (one's life), pass, maintain, continue in
outlast (danger), float (of a ship, boat)
Translations to be checked
See also
Etymology 2
An aphetic form of alive .
Pronunciation
Adjective
live (comparative more live , superlative most live )
( only used attributively ) Having life ; that is alive .
The post office will not ship live animals.
Being in existence ; actual .
He is a live example of the consequences of excessive drinking.
Having active properties ; being energized .
Because the vaccinia virus is live , it is important to follow care instructions for the vaccination site.
Operational ; in actual use rather than in testing etc.
( programming ) Of an object or value: that may potentially be used in the future execution of a program .
Antonym: dead
1996 , Richard Jones, Rafael Lins, Garbage Collection , →ISBN , page 4:An object in the heap is live if its address is held in a root, or there is a pointer to it held in another live heap node.
Taken from a living animal .
live feathers
( engineering ) Imparting power ; having motion .
the live spindle of a lathe
a live , or driving, axle
( sports ) Still in active play.
a live ball
( card games ) Of a card: not yet dealt or played.
2005 , Alison M. Pendergast, Play Winning Poker in No Time , page 57 :As a beginner, when you are in a hand, you should practice counting your outs, or those live cards left in the deck that can improve your hand.
( broadcasting ) Being broadcast ("on the air"), as it happens.
The station presented a live news program every evening.
Are we live ?
( of a performance or speech ) In person .
This nightclub has a live band on weekends.
( entertainment, performing ) Recorded from a performance in front of an audience .
a live album
Able to fire or explode ( of firearms or explosives ) .
The air force practices dropping live bombs on the uninhabited island.
Of an environment where sound is recorded : having noticeable reverberation .
2002 , John Eargle, Chris Foreman, Audio Engineering for Sound Reinforcement , page 21 :A good experiment is to have a friend stand in a fixed position in a moderately live room and talk in a clear voice.
2016 , Jason Corey, Audio Production and Critical Listening: Technical Ear Training , page 136 :It sounds like the instruments were recorded in a fairly live room with reverb added.
( circuitry ) Electrically charged or energized , usually indicating that the item may cause electrocution if touched.
Use caution when working near live wires.
( poker ) Being a bet which can be raised by the bettor , usually in reference to a blind or straddle .
Tommy's blind was live , so he was given the option to raise.
( film ) Featuring humans; not animated , in the phrases “live actors ” or “live action ”.
Being in a state of ignition ; burning .
a live coal; live embers
1916 March 25, Irvin S. Cobb , “"Unaccustomed as I am—"”, in Saturday Evening Post :Call it a dead language if you want to—it looks to me like those Latinites were the live boys when it came to putting a whole lot of meaning into just two or three words.
( obsolete ) Vivid ; bright .
( slang )
( dated ) Energetic , attentive , active .
a live man, or orator
1915 , “In the Scout Cave”, in Boys' Life , volume 5, number 3, page 23 :Now then, Bill, I've recommended to the troop that they take you in, and the fellows have all voted in favor of you. These scouts are a live bunch and they all expect you to make good.
Outstanding , top-notch , exhilarating .
1998 , Kimberly S. Phillips, Purpose Lies Within , Messenger Publishing, →ISBN , page 119 :The party was live , and the music was jammin. All over the beach people in colorful swimsuits were moving to the beat.
( linguistics ) Of a syllable in languages such as Thai and Burmese : resonating, not ending abruptly.
Antonym: dead
Usage notes
Live in the sense of "having life" is used only attributively (before a noun), as in "live animals". Predicatively (after the noun), alive is used, as in "be alive". Living may be used either attributively or predicatively.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Derived terms
Translations
(broadcasting) seen or heard from a broadcast, as it happens
Arabic: مُباشِر ( mubāšir )
Armenian: ուղիղ (hy) ( uġiġ )
Azerbaijani: canlı (az) , canlı yayımda
Bulgarian: дире́ктен (bg) ( dirékten ) , на живо ( na živo )
Catalan: en viu
Chinese:
Mandarin: 直播 (zh) ( zhíbō )
Danish: direkte
Dutch: live (nl) , rechtstreeks (nl)
Estonian: otse
Faroese: beinleiðis
Finnish: suora (fi)
French: en direct (fr) , en live
Georgian: პირდაპირი ჩართვა ( ṗirdaṗiri čartva ) , პირდაპირი ეთერი ( ṗirdaṗiri eteri ) , პირდაპირი მაუწყებლობა ( ṗirdaṗiri mauc̣q̇ebloba )
German: Live-
Greek: ζωντανός (el) m ( zontanós )
Hindi: सीधा प्रसारण ( sīdhā prasāraṇ )
Hungarian: élő (hu)
Indonesian: langsung (id)
Italian: in diretta , dal vivo , in presa diretta , in tempo reale , live (it)
Japanese: ライブ (ja) ( raibu )
Khmer: ផ្សាយផ្ទាល់ ( phsaayphtŏəl )
Korean: 라이브 ( raibeu )
Malay: langsung
Malayalam: തത്സമയ ( tatsamaya )
Maori: mataora , matawā
Occitan: en viu
Persian: زنده (fa) ( zende )
Polish: live (pl)
Portuguese: ao vivo (pt)
Romanian: în direct
Russian: в эфи́ре ( v efíre ) , в прямо́м эфи́ре ( v prjamóm efíre ) , лайв (ru) ( lajv ) , живьём (ru) ( živʹjóm ) , вживу́ю (ru) ( vživúju )
Scottish Gaelic: beò
Serbo-Croatian: uživo (sh)
Sicilian: â dritta , a vivu , 'n prisa dritta , 'n tempu riali , live
Slovak: naživo , na živo
Slovene: v žívo
Spanish: en vivo (es) , en directo (es)
Swedish: direkt (sv)
Turkish: canlı (tr)
Ukrainian: нажи́во ( nažývo ) , у прямо́му ете́рі ( u prjamómu etéri ) , у прямо́му ефі́рі ( u prjamómu efíri )
Urdu: براہِ راست ( barāh-e-rāst )
Vietnamese: trực tiếp (vi)
being in a state of ignition; burning
Translations to be checked
Adverb
live (comparative more live , superlative most live )
Of an event, as it happens; in real time ; direct .
The concert was broadcast live by radio.
Of making a performance or speech, in person .
He'll be appearing live at the auditorium.
Translations
as it happens
Armenian: ուղիղ (hy) ( uġiġ ) , ուղիղ եթերով ( uġiġ etʻerov )
Basque: zuzenean
Bulgarian: на живо ( na živo )
Catalan: en viu , en directe
Czech: živě (cs) , v přímém přenose
Dutch: rechtstreeks (nl)
Finnish: suorana , livenä (fi)
French: en direct (fr)
German: direkt (de) , live (de)
Greek: ζωντανά (el) ( zontaná ) , λάιβ ( láiv )
Hungarian: élőben (hu)
Icelandic: beint (is)
Indonesian: langsung (id)
Italian: dal vivo , live (it) , in presa diretta , in tempo reale
Japanese: 生の (ja) ( なまの, nama no )
Kurdish:
Northern Kurdish: zindî (ku)
Macedonian: во живо ( vo živo )
Malay: langsung
Malayalam: തത്സമയം (ml) ( tatsamayaṁ )
Norwegian: direkte (no) , live (no) ( English loanword )
Polish: na żywo (pl) , live (pl)
Portuguese: ao vivo (pt) , em direto (pt)
Romanian: în direct
Russian: в прямо́м эфи́ре ( v prjamóm efíre ) , живьём (ru) ( živʹjóm ) , вживу́ю (ru) ( vživúju )
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: у̏жӣво
Roman: ȕžīvo (sh)
Slovak: v priamom prenose , naživo
Slovene: v živo
Spanish: en vivo (es) , en directo (es)
Swahili: ishi (sw)
Swedish: direkt (sv)
Thai: สด (th) ( sòt )
Turkish: canlı (tr)
Ukrainian: нажи́во ( nažývo )
Urdu: براہِ راست ( barāh-e-rāst )
Further reading
“live ”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary , Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam , 1913 , →OCLC .
“live ”, in The Century Dictionary , New York, N.Y.: The Century Co. , 1911 , →OCLC .
Anagrams
Chinese
Etymology
From English live , possibly via Japanese ライブ ( raibu ) .
Pronunciation
( Hong Kong Cantonese ) IPA (key ) : /laːi̯f⁵⁵/
Verb
live
( Hong Kong Cantonese , Taiwanese Mandarin ) to broadcast live ; to stream
( Hong Kong Cantonese , Internet slang ) to reach the end (i.e. the newest posts ) on a forum thread
Noun
live
( Hong Kong Cantonese , Taiwanese Mandarin ) live performance ; concert (Classifier : 場 / 场 m c )
( Hong Kong Cantonese ) livestream (Classifier : 條 / 条 c )
Derived terms
Danish
Etymology 1
Verbal form of the noun liv ( “ life ” ) .
Pronunciation
Verb
live (imperative liv , infinitive at live , present tense liver , past tense livede , perfect tense har livet )
enliven
Usage notes
Used with op ( “ up ” ) : live op
Etymology 2
Borrowed from English live First attested in 1965.
Adverb
live
live ( as it happens )
Synonyms
Esperanto
Etymology
From liva + -e .
Pronunciation
Adverb
live (lative liven )
( neologism ) on the left
Synonym: maldekstre
Antonym: dekstre
Finnish
Etymology 1
lipeä + -e
Pronunciation
Noun
live ( dialectal )
lye
Declension
Synonyms
Derived terms
Further reading
Etymology 2
From English live .
Pronunciation
Noun
live
( in compounds ) live
Usage notes
Chiefly used as modifier in compound terms:
live -esitys ― live performance
Almost always used in the essive singular when used independently:
He esiintyvät tänään livenä areenalla. They will perform live today at the arena.
Declension
Synonyms
Derived terms
Further reading
Anagrams
French
Pronunciation
Adjective
live
recorded at a concert as opposed to in a studio
in real time
(Quebec, Eastern Ontario) now, at this moment.
Synonyms
Noun
live m (plural live or lives )
live stream , a video broadcast in real time, a Q&A (even written) in real time
Synonym: direct
comment faire un live sur YouTube ― how to do a livestream on YouTube
Le Monde a fait un live pendant le confinement. - Le Monde did a live Q&A during the lockdown.
Derived terms
German
Etymology
Borrowed from English live .
Pronunciation
Adverb
live
( broadcast, event ) live ( as it happens, in real time, directly )
Synonyms: direkt , in Echtzeit
Usage notes
There is no adjective corresponding to live , but it can form compounds (see below).
Derived terms
Further reading
“live ” in Duden online
“live ” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
Italian
Etymology
Borrowed from English live , originally as an adjective.[ 1]
Pronunciation
Adjective
live (invariable )
performed or recorded live
Synonym: dal vivo
Noun
live m (invariable )
live broadcast; live reporting
References
^ live in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line , Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
^ live in Luciano Canepari , Dizionario di Pronuncia Italiana (DiPI)
Anagrams
Latin
Verb
līvē
second-person singular present active imperative of līveō
Middle English
Verb
live
Alternative form of lyven
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology 1
Pronunciation
Noun
live n
dative singular of liv
Usage notes
Etymology 2
Borrowed from English live .
Pronunciation
Adjective
live (singular and plural live )
live ( some technical senses )
( broadcasting ) on air
( of a performance or speech ) in person
( entertainment, performing ) recorded in front of a live audience
Etymology 3
From Old Norse hlífa , from Proto-Germanic *hlībijaną . The noun is derived from the verb.
Pronunciation
Verb
live (present tense liver , past tense livde , past participle livt /livd , passive infinitive livast , present participle livande , imperative liv )
( transitive ) to shelter , protect , especially from the weather and elements
Noun
live n (definite singular livet , uncountable )
( rare ) shelter , cover , protection , especially from the elements
Synonyms: le , livd , ly
Etymology 4
Of the noun liv n ( “ life ” ) .
Pronunciation
Verb
live (present tense livar , past tense liva , past participle liva , passive infinitive livast , present participle livande , imperative live /liv )
( transitive , intransitive ) to liven
Derived terms
References
“live” in The Nynorsk Dictionary .
Anagrams
Picard
Etymology
From Latin liber .
Noun
live m (plural lives )
book
Polish
Etymology
Unadapted borrowing from English live .
Pronunciation
IPA (key ) : /ˈlajf/
Rhymes: -ajf
Syllabification: live
Adjective
live (not comparable , no derived adverb )
( broadcasting , colloquial , postpositive ) live ( seen or heard from a broadcast, as it happens )
( colloquial , music , postpositive ) live ( made during a performance in front of an audience, and not, as usual, in a recording studio )
Adverb
live (not comparable )
( colloquial , postpositive ) live ( as it happens )
Synonym: na żywo
Antonym: z puszki
Noun
live m inan
( broadcasting , colloquial ) live transmission
( colloquial , music ) live recording ( recording made during a performance in front of an audience, and not, as usual, in a recording studio )
Declension
Further reading
live in Wielki słownik języka polskiego , Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN
live in Polish dictionaries at PWN
Portuguese
Etymology
Unadapted borrowing from English live .
Pronunciation
Noun
live m or f (plural lives )
video stream ( either a live stream or a recording of a past live stream )
Synonym: direto
Hoje assisti à live que fizeram na semana passada. Today, I've watched the stream that they did last week.
Romanian
Etymology
Unadapted borrowing from English live .
Adjective
live m or f or n (indeclinable )
live
Declension
Declension of live (invariable)
singular
plural
masculine
neuter
feminine
masculine
neuter
feminine
nominative/ accusative
indefinite
live
live
live
live
definite
—
—
—
—
genitive/ dative
indefinite
live
live
live
live
definite
—
—
—
—
Adverb
live
live
Swazi
Noun
líve class 5 (plural émáve class 6 )
country
Inflection
This noun needs an inflection-table template .
Yola
Etymology
From Middle English lyven , from Old English libban , from Proto-West Germanic *libbjan .
Pronunciation
Verb
live (present participle liveen )
to live
1867 , “CASTEALE CUDDE'S LAMENTATION”, in SONGS, ETC. IN THE DIALECT OF FORTH AND BARGY , number 6, page 104 :Lhaung mye thye live in prosperitee; Long may they live in prosperity;
References
Jacob Poole (d. 1827) (before 1828) William Barnes, editor, A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland , London: J. Russell Smith, published 1867 , page 104