Bleeding (disambiguation)

Bleeding usually means the leakage or loss of blood from the body.

Bleeding, bleed, or bleeder may also refer to:

  • Bleed (printing), intentionally printing across the expected trim line or edge of the sheet
  • Bleed, or spill (audio), when audio from one source is picked up by a microphone intended for a different source
  • Bleed, the presence of surface water on concrete
  • Bleed air, compressed air taken from gas turbine compressor stages
  • Bleeder, baseball term for a weakly hit ground ball that goes for a base hit
  • Bleeder resistor, which passively discharges a capacitor when it is disconnected or equipment is powered off
  • Bleeding (computer graphics), a computer graphics term for when a graphic object passes through another in an unwanted manner
  • Bleeding (roads), a type of pavement distress common in asphalt roads
  • Bleeding, or capillary action, the ability of a substance (such as blood, ink, or water) to flow in narrow spaces without the assistance of, and in opposition to external forces like gravity
  • Bleeding, purging air from a radiator, brake line, fuel line, etc.
  • Bleeding, the migration by dissolution of a component of a composite, e.g., pigments bleed into some plasticizers
  • Bleeding order, a relation between rules in linguistics
  • Bloodletting, a practice once believed to cure diseases

Arts, entertainment, and media

Film

Music

Groups

Albums

Songs

Other arts, entertainment, and media

  • Bleed (comics), a "backdoor" into the various fictional universes of the Multiverse
  • Bleed (video game), an action-oriented platform video game
  • "Bleed", the emotional transfer between a player and his character during a role-playing game coined by Emily Care Boss
gollark: Matrix is apiously complicated, denied.
gollark: I suspect that part of it might be that my disk is a slow outdated 7200RPM hard disk, since it's *quite* fast after I refresh, but still.
gollark: osmarkscalculator™, we've been through this.
gollark: It literally 504s regularly.
gollark: So the inevitable conclusion is to osmarksĂźs up something bad.

See also

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