Adjective
flesh and blood (not comparable)
- Real; substantial.
2019 July 17, Talia Lavin, “When Non-Jews Wield Anti-Semitism as Political Shield”, in GQ:[Minnesota Senator Steve] Daines isn’t the only example of right-wing politicians who wish to wield anti-Semitism as a convenient cudgel against their political enemies, with scant if any evidence. But Montana’s vanishingly small Jewish population makes it particularly clear that this strategy has little to do with flesh-and-blood Jews at all.
- Consisting of flesh, blood, and other substances associated with animals or humans.
Noun
flesh and blood (uncountable)
- A human body; a person generally.
1991 September, Stephen Fry, chapter 1, in The Liar, London: Heinemann, →ISBN, →OCLC, section I, page 17:[…] I'll tell you what else is a fact. It's a fact that he is wearing his blue Shetland turtle-neck today. Even as we speak his body is moving inside it. Warm and quick. It's more than flesh and blood can stand.
- One's family, or member of one's family.
How dare you say such a thing to your own flesh and blood?
- Human nature. (Can we add an example for this sense?)
- (UK, Ireland, slang, obsolete) A mixture of brandy and port in equal quantities.
Translations
one's family
- Georgian: სისხლი და ხორცი (sisxli da xorci)
- Hebrew: בשר מבשר־ (he) m (basár mibasar-, literally “flesh from (one’s) flesh”) (plus pronominal suffix)
- Tagalog: dugo't laman
- Tibetan: ཤ་རུས (sha rus, literally “flesh-blood”), ཤ་རུས་གཅིག་པ (sha rus gcig pa, literally “flesh-blood-ling”)
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References
- (mixed brandy and port): 1873, John Camden Hotten, The Slang Dictionary