- blédan
- wv/t1b to bleed, let blood
Old to modern English dictionary. 2013.
Old to modern English dictionary. 2013.
bleed — I. verb (bled; bleeding) Etymology: Middle English bleden, from Old English blēdan, from blōd blood Date: before 12th century intransitive verb 1. a. to emit or lose blood b. to sacrifice one s blood especially in battle 2. t … New Collegiate Dictionary
Dune (videojuego) — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Dune Desarrolladora(s) Cryo Interactive Distribuidora(s) Virgin Entertainment Fecha(s) de lanzamiento 1992, 1993 … Wikipedia Español
bhel- — I. bhel 1 To shine, flash, burn; shining white and various bright colors. Derivatives include blue, bleach, blind, blond, blanket, black, flagrant, and flame. I. Suffixed full grade form … Universalium
bleed — /bleed/, v., bled /bled/, bleeding, n., adj. v.i. 1. to lose blood from the vascular system, either internally into the body or externally through a natural orifice or break in the skin: to bleed from the mouth. 2. (of injured tissue,… … Universalium
Arnauld de Banyuls — Arnauld III de Banyuls Surnom Arnau, Arnald, Arno ... Naissance fin XIIIe siècle (vers 1280) Banyuls dels Aspres Décès début XIVe (vers 1320) Perpignan Origine … Wikipédia en Français
bleed — [bli:d] v past tense and past participle bled [bled] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(blood)¦ 2¦(money)¦ 3¦(air/liquid)¦ 4¦(colour)¦ 5 bleed red ink ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [: Old English; Origin: bledan, from blod; BLOOD] 1.) ¦(BLOOD)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
bleed — [OE] As its form suggests, bleed is a derivative of blood, but a very ancient one. From Germanic *blōtham ‘blood’ was formed the verb *blōthjan ‘emit blood’, which came into Old English as blēdan, ancestor of bleed. => BLOOD … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
bleed — (v.) O.E. bledan to let blood, in M.E. and after, to let blood from surgically; also to emit blood, from P.Gmc. *blodjan emit blood (Cf. O.N. blæða, Ger. bluten), from *bhlo to swell, gush, spurt (see BLOOD (Cf. blood) (n.)). Meaning extort money … Etymology dictionary
bleed — verb (past and past participle bled) 1》 lose blood from the body as a result of injury or illness. 2》 draw blood from (someone) as a former method of medical treatment. 3》 (often in phr. bleed someone dry) informal drain of money or resources. 4》 … English new terms dictionary
bleed — [[t]blid[/t]] v. bled(bled), bleed•ing, 1) pat to lose, discharge, or exude blood 2) bot (of a plant) to exude sap, resin, etc., from a wound 3) tex a) to run or become diffused: The colors bled when the dress was washed[/ex] b) tex to lose or… … From formal English to slang