Bleed
UK /["/bliːd/","/bliːdz/","/bled/","/ˈbliːdɪŋ/"]/US /["/bliːd/","/bliːdz/","/bled/","/ˈbliːdɪŋ/"]/
Definition
to lose blood, especially from a wound or an injury
In simple words: To lose blood from the body.
Examples
- 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.
- The company seems intent on bleeding us for every penny we have.
- Keep the paint fairly dry so that the colours don't bleed into each other.
- The big corporations are bleeding some of these small countries dry.
- ‘I have to go to Brazil on business.’ ‘My heart bleeds for you!’
Usage notes
Used in medical contexts to describe injury or surgery. Can be used metaphorically for losing something valuable. Not typically used in formal writing.
Grammar pattern
bleed + object
Memory hint
Think of a wound that needs to 'lead' away blood — 'bleed' sounds like 'lead'.
Collocations
- badly
- heavily
- profusely
- from
- bleed to death
Synonyms
- drain
- seep
- exude
- hemorrhage
- lose blood
Antonyms
- clot
- heal
Common mistakes
- Confused with 'bled', the past tense form.
- Omitting the object, e.g., saying 'bleed' without specifying what's bleeding.
- Using inappropriately in non-medical contexts.