bleeding

verb
/ˈbliːdɪŋ/

Etymology

By surface analysis, bleed + -ing.

Definitions

  1. present participle and gerund of bleed

  2. Losing blood.

  3. extreme, outright

    extreme, outright; bloody, blasted.

    • You are a bleeding liar. Truth is of no interest to you at all.
    • "You are a bleeding idiot sometimes, but I love you and", Harry hands him the first gift Severus ever gave him and says, "One hundred and sixteen."
  4. + 7 more definitions
    1. used as an intensifier

      used as an intensifier: Extremely.

      • His car's motor is bleeding smoking down the motorway.
      • It turns out he was too bleeding cheap to ever drain the oil.
      • It does highlight some of the difficulties, but does not dare state the bleeding obvious, which is that neither are likely to play a major part in delivering a decarbonised agenda on the railways – […].
    2. The flow or loss of blood from a damaged blood vessel.

      • Internal bleeding is often difficult to detect and can lead to death in a short time.
    3. Bloodletting.

      • Notwithstanding the employ of general and local bleeding, blisters, &c., the patient died on the fourth day after entrance.
    4. Depletion of a given resource

      Depletion of a given resource; draining, sapping, weakening.

      • the bleeding of the budget
      • the bleeding of the treasury
    5. Menstruation.

      • Owing to the prudery of Victorian times, people hardly dared talk about bleeding at all — even privately, let alone publicly.
    6. The migration of impressions (dents), ink, or both through the substrate (paper or…

      The migration of impressions (dents), ink, or both through the substrate (paper or otherwise).

    7. Printing past the edge of the leaf (past the trim).

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for bleeding. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

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