| animate | | |
| animate, enliven, exalt, inspire, invigorate | (v.) | heighten or intensify.; "These paintings exalt the imagination" |
| animate, animise, animize | (v.) | give lifelike qualities to.; "animated cartoons" |
| animate, enliven, invigorate, liven, liven up | (v.) | make lively.; "let's liven up this room a bit" |
| animate, quicken, reanimate, recreate, renovate, repair, revive, revivify, vivify | (v.) | give new life or energy to.; "A hot soup will revive me"; "This will renovate my spirits"; "This treatment repaired my health" |
| animate | (adj.) | belonging to the class of nouns that denote living beings.; "the word `dog' is animate" |
| animate | (adj.) | endowed with animal life as distinguished from plant life.; "we are animate beings" |
| animate, sentient | (adj.) | endowed with feeling and unstructured consciousness.; "the living knew themselves just sentient puppets on God's stage" |
| live | | |
| dwell, inhabit, live, populate | (v.) | inhabit or live in; be an inhabitant of.; "People lived in Africa millions of years ago"; "The people inhabited the islands that are now deserted"; "this kind of fish dwells near the bottom of the ocean"; "deer are populating the woods" |
| live | (v.) | lead a certain kind of life; live in a certain style.; "we had to live frugally after the war" |
| endure, go, hold out, hold up, last, live, live on, survive | (v.) | continue to live through hardship or adversity.; "We went without water and food for 3 days"; "These superstitions survive in the backwaters of America"; "The race car driver lived through several very serious accidents"; "how long can a person last without food and water?" |
| exist, live, subsist, survive | (v.) | support oneself.; "he could barely exist on such a low wage"; "Can you live on $2000 a month in New York City?"; "Many people in the world have to subsist on $1 a day" |
| be, live | (v.) | have life, be alive.; "Our great leader is no more"; "My grandfather lived until the end of war" |
| experience, know, live | (v.) | have firsthand knowledge of states, situations, emotions, or sensations.; "I know the feeling!"; "have you ever known hunger?"; "I have lived a kind of hell when I was a drug addict"; "The holocaust survivors have lived a nightmare"; "I lived through two divorces" |
| live | (v.) | pursue a positive and satisfying existence.; "You must accept yourself and others if you really want to live" |
| live, unrecorded | (adj.) | actually being performed at the time of hearing or viewing.; "a live television program"; "brought to you live from Lincoln Center"; "live entertainment involves performers actually in the physical presence of a live audience" |
| live | (adj.) | exerting force or containing energy.; "live coals"; "tossed a live cigarette out the window"; "got a shock from a live wire"; "live ore is unmined ore"; "a live bomb"; "a live ball is one in play" |
| alive, live | (adj.) | possessing life.; "the happiest person alive"; "the nerve is alive"; "doctors are working hard to keep him alive"; "burned alive"; "a live canary" |
| live | (adj.) | highly reverberant.; "a live concert hall" |
| live | (adj.) | charged with an explosive.; "live ammunition"; "a live bomb" |
| bouncy, live, lively, resilient, springy | (adj.) | elastic; rebounds readily.; "clean bouncy hair"; "a lively tennis ball"; "as resilient as seasoned hickory"; "springy turf" |
| live | (adj.) | abounding with life and energy.; "the club members are a really live bunch" |
| live | (adj.) | in current use or ready for use.; "live copy is ready to be set in type or already set but not yet proofread" |
| live | (adj.) | of current relevance.; "a live issue"; "still a live option" |
| hot, live | (adj.) | charged or energized with electricity.; "a hot wire"; "a live wire" |
| alive, live | (adj.) | capable of erupting.; "a live volcano"; "the volcano is very much alive" |
| live | (adv.) | not recorded.; "the opera was broadcast live" |
| alive | | |
| alive | (adj.) | (often followed by `with') full of life and spirit.; "she was wonderfully alive for her age"; "a face alive with mischief" |
| alive, animated | (adj.) | having life or vigor or spirit.; "an animated and expressive face"; "animated conversation"; "became very animated when he heard the good news" |
| alive | (adj.) | (followed by `to' or `of') aware of.; "is alive to the moods of others" |
| active, alive | (adj.) | in operation.; "keep hope alive"; "the tradition was still alive"; "an active tradition" |
| alert, alive, awake | (adj.) | mentally perceptive and responsive.; "an alert mind"; "alert to the problems"; "alive to what is going on"; "awake to the dangers of her situation"; "was now awake to the reality of his predicament" |
| survive | | |
| come through, make it, pull round, pull through, survive | (v.) | continue in existence after (an adversity, etc.).; "He survived the cancer against all odds" |
| outlast, outlive, survive | (v.) | live longer than.; "She outlived her husband by many years" |
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