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    bleed
    /bliːd/

    verb

    • 1. lose blood from the body as a result of injury or illness: "the cut was bleeding steadily" Similar lose bloodhaemorrhage
    • 2. draw blood from (someone), especially as a former method of treatment in medicine: "he didn't bleed his patients with leeches" Similar draw blood fromtechnical:phlebotomizeexsanguinateOpposite transfuse

    noun

    • 1. an instance of bleeding: "a lot of blood was lost from the placental bleed"
    • 2. the escape of fluid or gas from a closed system through a valve: "check the amount of air bleed from the compressor"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. BLEED definition: 1. to lose blood: 2. (in the past) to make someone lose blood, as a cure for an illness 3. If you…. Learn more.

  3. 1. a. : to emit or lose blood. b. : to sacrifice one's blood especially in battle. 2. : to feel anguish, pain, or sympathy. a heart that bleeds at a friend's misfortune. 3. a. : to escape by oozing or flowing (as from a wound) b. : to spread into or through something gradually : seep. foreign policy bleeds into economic policy J. B. Judis. 4.

  4. Bleed definition: to lose blood from the vascular system, either internally into the body or externally through a natural orifice or break in the skin. See examples of BLEED used in a sentence.

  5. bleed sth from sth The energy crisis is estimated to be bleeding $1.4 billion a month from the region's economy. bleed sb/sth dry. disapproving. to take all or most of the money of a person, organization, country, etc.: Unfair trade bleeds countries dry through repayments of national debts.

  6. 14 meanings: 1. to lose or emit blood 2. to remove or draw blood from (a person or animal) 3. to be injured or die, as for a.... Click for more definitions.

  7. Definition of bleed verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. Some kind of illness or injury, particularly one that cuts or scrapes your skin, can make you bleed. In long ago days of medical care, doctors would deliberately bleed patients to treat specific conditions, though today we mainly bleed due to accidents.