bleed
verb /bliːd/
/bliːd/
Verb Forms
Idioms present simple I / you / we / they bleed | /bliːd/ /bliːd/ |
he / she / it bleeds | /bliːdz/ /bliːdz/ |
past simple bled | /bled/ /bled/ |
past participle bled | /bled/ /bled/ |
-ing form bleeding | /ˈbliːdɪŋ/ /ˈbliːdɪŋ/ |
- My finger's bleeding.
- She slowly bled to death.
- He was bleeding from a gash on his head.
- The small blood vessels in the nose bleed easily.
WordfinderTopics Illnessc1- bandage
- bleed
- bruise
- fracture
- hurt
- injury
- plaster
- sore
- swell
- wound
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- badly
- heavily
- profusely
- …
- from
- bleed to death
- [transitive] bleed somebody (in the past) to take blood from somebody as a way of treating disease
- [transitive] bleed somebody (for something) (informal) to force somebody to pay a lot of money over a period of time
- The company seems intent on bleeding us for every penny we have.
- [transitive] bleed something to remove air or liquid from something so that it works correctly
- [intransitive] bleed (into something) to spread from one area of something to another area
- Keep the paint fairly dry so that the colours don't bleed into each other.
Word OriginOld English blēdan, of Germanic origin; related to blood.
Idioms
bleed somebody dry
- (disapproving) to take away all somebody’s money
- The big corporations are bleeding some of these small countries dry.
my heart bleeds (for somebody)
- (ironic) used to say that you do not feel sympathy for somebody
- ‘I have to go to Brazil on business.’ ‘My heart bleeds for you!’