bleed
verb
bliːd
verb
1
BLOOD
血
a.
to
lose
blood,
especially
because
of
an
injury
b.
to
take
some
blood
from
someone’s
body,
done
in
the
past
in
order
to
treat
a
disease
给…放血〔过去治病的方法〕
I T
Your
nose
is
bleeding.
你的鼻子流血了。
Tragically,
she
bled
to
death
.
非常不幸,她失血过多死了。
bleed
profusely/heavily
(bleed
a
lot)
大量出血
Mrs
Burke
was
found
unconscious
and
bleeding
profusely.
伯克夫人被发现时已经不省人事,而且大量出血。
When
he
fell
sick
several
days
later,
he
had
a
doctor
bleed
him.
几天后他病倒了,就让医生给他放血。
2
MONEY
钱
to
force
someone
to
pay
an
unreasonable
amount
of
money
over
a
period
of
time
榨取〔钱财〕
T
His
ex-wife
clearly
intends
to
bleed
him
for
every
last
penny.
他的前妻显然是想榨乾他的钱财。
bleed
sb
dry/white
(take
all
their
money,
possessions
etc)
把某人榨乾
The
ten-year
war
has
bled
the
country
dry.
十年战争耗尽了该国的财力。
3
AIR/LIQUID
空气/液体
to
remove
air
or
liquid
from
a
system
in
order
to
make
it
work
properly,
for
example
from
a
heating
system
抽掉〔气体或液体〕
T
We
need
to
bleed
the
radiators.
我们得把散热器中的水放掉。
4
COLOUR
颜色
to
spread
from
one
area
of
cloth
or
paper
to
another
渗开;
I
Wash
it
in
cold
water
so
the
colours
don’t
bleed.
用冷水洗涤以防渗色。
5
bleed red ink
if
a
company
or
business
bleeds
red
ink,
it
loses
a
lot
of
money
rather
than
making
money
[非正式] 出现赤字,出现亏损
informal
Analysts
predict
the
retailer
will
continue
to
bleed
red
ink,
with
losses
topping
$180
million.
分析人士预测,这家零售企业将会继续亏损,亏损额将超过 1.8 亿美元。