Associations to the word «Lush»
Noun
- Jungle
- Grass
- Meadow
- Pasture
- Waterfall
- Landscape
- Ballad
- Melody
- Sparkling
- Rolling
- Garden
- Vineyard
- Indie
- Carpet
- Arrangement
- String
- Woodland
- Palm
- Green
- Valley
- Tree
- Vegetation
- Acre
- Rainforest
- Foliage
- Fruit
- Hill
- Geoff
- Boo
- Fern
- Backdrop
- Paddy
- Grassland
- Farmland
- Synth
- Lawn
- Countryside
- Postcard
- Scenery
- Blur
- Instrumentation
- Monsoon
- Mangrove
- Surrounding
- Cinematography
- Forest
- Marcus
- Parkland
- Laurence
- Valerie
- Thick
Adjective
- Fertile
- Green
- Gorgeous
- Vibrant
- Orchestral
- Colorful
- Psychedelic
- Tropical
- Layered
- Scenic
- Mountainous
- Grassy
- Ambient
- Abundant
- Pop
- Tangled
- Beautiful
- Romantic
- Vocal
- Thick
- Sound
- Rich
- Lush
- Warm
- Arid
- Dreamy
- Barren
- Sprawling
- Coconut
- Surrounded
- Deciduous
- Picturesque
- Fragrant
- Bizarre
- Erotic
- Temperate
- Plentiful
- Melodic
- Sparse
- Exotic
- Serene
- Expansive
- Wooded
- Forested
Adverb
Wiktionary
LUSH, adjective. (obsolete) Lax; slack; limp; flexible.
LUSH, adjective. (dialectal) Mellow; soft; (of ground or soil) easily turned.
LUSH, adjective. (of vegetation) Dense, teeming with life.
LUSH, adjective. (slang) (of food) Luxuriant, delicious.
LUSH, adjective. (British) (slang) Beautiful, sexy.
LUSH, adjective. (British) (Canada) (slang) Amazing, cool, fantastic, wicked.
LUSH, noun. (slang) (pejorative) Drunkard, sot, alcoholic.
LUSH, noun. (slang) Intoxicating liquor.
LUSH, verb. (intransitive) To drink liquor to excess.
LUSH, verb. (transitive) To drink (liquor) to excess.
LUSH, proper noun. A surname.
Dictionary definition
LUSH, noun. A person who drinks alcohol to excess habitually.
LUSH, adjective. Produced or growing in extreme abundance; "their riotous blooming".
LUSH, adjective. Characterized by extravagance and profusion; "a lavish buffet"; "a lucullan feast".
LUSH, adjective. Full of juice; "lush fruits"; "succulent roast beef"; "succulent plants with thick fleshy leaves".
Wise words
Life has no meaning unless one lives it with a will, at
least to the limit of one's will. Virtue, good, evil are
nothing but words, unless one takes them apart in order to
build something with them; they do not win their true
meaning until one knows how to apply them.