vivacious

adj
/vaɪˈveɪ.ʃəs/

Etymology

From Latin vīvāx, vīvāci- (“lively, vigorous”) + -ous, from vīvere (“to live”).

Definitions

  1. Lively and animated

    Lively and animated; full of life and energy.

    • Given the vivacious young redhead's attractiveness, some might have assumed he had more than simply professional reasons for sheepdogging her career, but they would have been wrong. He'd seen something in her ...
  2. Long-lived.

  3. Difficult to kill.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

A definitional loop anchored at vivacious. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.

01vivacious02kill03stop04cease05perish06die07animation08vivacity

A definitional loop anchored at vivacious. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.

8 hops · closes at vivacious

curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA