单词 | haemorrhage |
释义 | haemorrhagehemorrhagen. An escape of blood from the blood vessels; a flux of blood, either external or internal, due to rupture of a vessel; bleeding, esp. when profuse or dangerous. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > discharge or flux > [noun] > bleeding or flow of blood runeOE stranda1240 flux1377 bleedingc1385 rhexisc1425 issuec1500 haemorrhagy?1541 bleeda1585 sanguination1598 falla1616 haemorrhage1671 saltation1672 persultation1706 fusion1725 haematosis1811 phleborrhagia1833 secondary haemorrhage1837 splinter haemorrhage1931 haemorrhaging1967 1671 W. Salmon Synopsis Medicinæ iii. xxii. 401 Outwardly it stops an Hæmorrhage. 1732 J. Arbuthnot Pract. Rules of Diet iii. 327 Profuse Hæmorrages from the Nose commonly resolve it. 1873 E. J. Worboise Our New Home (1877) xviii. 284 Taken very ill with hemorrhage of the lungs. 1880 T. H. Huxley Crayfish 38 It is likely to die rapidly from the ensuing haemorrhage. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1898; most recently modified version published online December 2020). haemorrhagev. 1. intransitive. a. To suffer a haemorrhage; to bleed profusely or uncontrollably, usually internally. ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > discharge or flux > discharge [verb (intransitive)] > bleed bleeda1000 letc1330 flux1638 haemorrhage1920 1920 W. H. Harvey Misadventures Athelstan Digby viii. 149 I believe he's started to hæmorrhage again; anyhow the dressing is all through. 1933 V. Brittain Testament of Youth viii. 409 Ten patients..were for immediate operation; a dozen more were for X-ray; several were likely to hæmorrhage at any moment. 1984 J. McCluskey in M. Evans Black Women Writers (1985) 328 She suffered a miscarriage and hemorrhaged while accompanying him on a field trip. 1989 Listener 21 Dec. 14/3 The hooligan had broken my nose... They waltzed anyway while I haemorrhaged heavily. b. transferred. To seep, grow, or spread uncontrollably; to be rampant. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > spreading or diffusion > [verb (intransitive)] > of immaterial things aspringc1000 to-bredea1023 spread?c1225 rangec1450 disperse1605 disseminate1803 percolate1854 haemorrhage1935 1935 E. B. White Hymn to Dark in New Yorker 23 Nov. 23 Our eyeballs blistered with unbearable brightness, The neon hemorrhaging, trickling from the tubes, Spilled on the earth like blood from a serpent. 1981 N.Y. Times Mag. 22 Feb. 9/2 A newer vogue word—pioneered by David Stockman, the budget hawk—is ‘hemorrhaging’. Terrorism, said General Haig, was ‘hemorrhaging in many respects throughout the world’. 2. transitive. To dissipate or expend (something, esp. money) in large amounts, as if by allowing it to drain away. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > misuse > [verb (transitive)] > waste spilla1000 scatter1154 aspilla1250 rospa1325 waste1340 spend1390 consumec1425 waste1474 miswenda1500 forsumea1510 to cast away1530 to throw away1561 embezzle1578 squander1593 palter1595 profuse1611 squander1611 ravel1614 sport1622 to fool away1628 to stream out1628 to fribble away1633 sweal1655 frisk1665 to fiddle away1667 wantonize1673 slattera1681 swattle1681 drivel1686 swatter1690 to muddle away1707 squander1717 sot1746 slattern1747 meisle1808 fritter1820 waster1821 slobber1837 to cut to waste1863 fringe1863 potter1883 putter1911 profligate1938 to piddle away1942 haemorrhage1978 spaff2002 1978 Observer 16 Apr. 38/7 We are not haemorrhaging our heritage away—or, if we are, the transfusions are almost keeping pace. 1987 D. Adams Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency xiv. 98 It hadn't taken her more than a few minutes to see that he had been simply haemorrhaging money as Michael toyed with it. 1990 Screen Internat. 21 Apr. 2/4 In the meantime, both sides continue to haemorrhage money in legal costs. Derivatives ˈhaemorrhaging n. and adj. ΘΚΠ the world > space > extension in space > spreading or diffusion > [noun] > specifically of immaterial things dilatation1448 propagation1531 dilating1532 enlargement1607 dilationa1631 radiationa1631 dispreadinga1652 factorship1697 rayonnement1910 haemorrhaging1967 the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > discharge or flux > [noun] > bleeding or flow of blood runeOE stranda1240 flux1377 bleedingc1385 rhexisc1425 issuec1500 haemorrhagy?1541 bleeda1585 sanguination1598 falla1616 haemorrhage1671 saltation1672 persultation1706 fusion1725 haematosis1811 phleborrhagia1833 secondary haemorrhage1837 splinter haemorrhage1931 haemorrhaging1967 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > misuse > [noun] > waste waste1297 spillingc1380 consuminga1538 profusion1545 lavishing1574 consumption1613 lavishment1630 frittering1795 uneconomicalness1817 wastry1830 wastage1885 ineconomy1897 haemorrhaging1967 the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > misuse > [adjective] > wasted > wasting haemorrhaging1967 1967 J. Didion Slouching towards Bethlehem 85 San Francisco was where the social hemorrhaging was showing up. 1975 New Yorker 22 Dec. 75/1 There was no evidence of any intradermal, submucosal, or subcutaneous hemorrhaging. 1985 Bulletin (Sydney) 10 Sept. 48/1 Minor-league sell-offs could include the Australian Industry Development Corporation..and the haemorrhaging Australian National Line as a giveaway. 1989 Times 22 May 17 We urgently need..to stop the haemorrhaging of commons and greens from the registers. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1993; most recently modified version published online December 2020). < n.1671v.1920 |
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