0 past simple and past participle of live --
3 to spend your life in a particular way: --
figurative The US is living beyond its means (= spending more than it earns).
She certainly lived her life to the full (= was always doing something interesting).
The TV's broken - we'll just have to live without (= not have) it for a while.
He simply wants to live (out) (= experience) the rest of his days in peace.
When you retire, you want to live a comfortable life.
After a while you get used to living alone.
4 to stay alive, especially by getting enough money to pay for food, a place to stay, clothing, etc.: --
5 (of things that are not alive) to exist or continue to exist: --
We have just seen that metabolism is even more fundamental than evolution, since non-reproducing organisms are conceivable and may once have lived.
It is hard to believe that these women lived under more deprived conditions than married women belonging to the same social class.
Indeed, individuals who lived with only one of their parents, or with none at all, enjoyed a higher chance of marrying.
At the outset of the eighteenth century it had some 800 inhabitants, and around 1860 approximately 1,300, who lived in sixteen mostly very small villages.
However, the subjects studied lived in a residential home and many were ex-smokers, so underlying age-related pathology may have biased the findings.
Two dummy variables were entered to indicate in which region the respondents lived, with the south as the reference group.
Instead of sticking to neurophysiology, they referred to the structure of the organism or the lived body.
But certainly he lived in an age when humanism and the scientific revolution had affected the way people thought.