Adjective
blood-soaked (comparative more blood-soaked, superlative most blood-soaked)
Alternative spelling of bloodsoaked
Bill loathes Slim for what he has done and who he is but, as the issue progresses and the two go on their many blood-soaked missions, both Bill and the reader begin to be swept up in Slim's charm. Source: Internet
Tash Peterson, 26, gained notoriety for accosting shoppers at Coles dressed as a blood-soaked abattoir worker and running onto the field during the first AFLW Derby at Optus Stadium in February. Source: Internet
“These are tales so terrifyingly twisted, we can only hope they stay on the blood-soaked pages of the newspaper headlines from our past.” Source: Internet
But when they arrived they saw the blood-soaked body, minus the head, of the veteran taxi man lying beside his house. Source: Internet
Behind him he heard the roaring of angry animals – a ragged, bloodthirsty pack with canines that stood out from their blood-soaked lips and the red claws of hungry vampires! Source: Internet
Gregory puts the details into Stonewall: from the blood-soaked coins on the pavement to the film that was about to be shown, he succeeds in making it a universal experience. Source: Internet