transude
1Transude — Tran*sude , v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Transuded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Transuding}.] [Pref. trans + L. sudare to sweat: cf. F. transsuder.] To pass, as perspirable matter does, through the pores or interstices of textures; as, liquor may transude through… …
2transude — [tran so͞od′, transyo͞od′] vt. transuded, transuding [ModL transudare < L trans , TRANS + sudare, to SWEAT] to ooze or exude through pores or interstices, as blood serum through the vessel walls …
3transude — verb (transuded; transuding) Etymology: New Latin transudare, from Latin trans + sudare to sweat more at sweat Date: 1664 intransitive verb to pass through a membrane or permeable substance ; exude transitive verb to permit passage of …
4transude — /tran soohd /, v.i., transuded, transuding. to pass or ooze through pores or interstices, as a fluid. [1655 65; < NL transudare, equiv. to L trans TRANS + sudare to SWEAT] * * * …
5transude — verb To pass through a pore, membrane or interstice. See Also: transudate, transudation …
6transude — In general, to ooze or to pass a liquid gradually through a membrane, more specifically, through a normal membrane, as a result of imbalanced hydrostatic and osmotic forces. [see transudate] * * * tran·sude tran(t)s (y)üd, tranz vb …
7transude — Synonyms and related words: bleed, discharge, effuse, egest, eliminate, emit, excrete, exfiltrate, extravasate, exudate, exude, filter, filtrate, give off, leach, lixiviate, ooze, pass, percolate, reek, secrete, seep, sew, strain, sweat,… …
8transude — (Roget s Thesaurus II) verb To flow or leak out or emit something slowly: bleed, exude, leach, ooze, percolate, seep, transpire, weep. See MOVE, SOLID …
9transude — tran·sude || træn suËd / sju v. ooze, exude …
10transude — [tran sju:d, trα:n ] verb archaic (of a fluid) discharge gradually through pores in a membrane. Derivatives transudate noun transudation noun Origin C17: from Fr. transsuder, from L. trans across + L. sudare to sweat …