leak+in+or+out

  • 1leak — leak1 S3 [li:k] v [Date: 1400 1500; : Old Norse; Origin: leka] 1.) [I and T] if a container, pipe, roof etc leaks, or if it leaks gas, liquid etc, there is a small hole or crack in it that lets gas or liquid flow through ▪ The roof is leaking in… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 2leak — /lik / (say leek) noun 1. an unintended hole, crack, or the like by which fluid, gas, etc., enters or escapes. 2. any avenue or means of unintended entrance or escape, or the entrance or escape itself. 3. Electricity a point where current escapes …

  • 3leak — I. n. 1. Fissure (letting a liquid in or out), chink, crevice, hole. 2. Leaking, leakage, percolation. II. v. a. 1. Percolate, leak in or out, ooze, pass slowly. 2. Let in (water or other liquid), take water, etc …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 4leak — [lēk] vi. [ME leken < ON leka, to drip < IE base * leg , to drip, trickle, LACK, OIr legaim, (I) dissolve, Welsh llaith, damp] 1. to let a fluid substance out or in accidentally [the boats leaks] 2. to enter, or escape accidentally from, an …

    English World dictionary

  • 5Leak — Leak, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Leaked} (l[=e]kt); p. pr. & vb. n. {Leaking}.] [Akin to D. lekken, G. lecken, lechen, Icel. leka, Dan. l[ae]kke, Sw. l[ a]cka, AS. leccan to wet, moisten. See {Leak}, n.] 1. To let water or other fluid in or out through …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 6leak|age — «LEE kihj», noun. 1. the act of leaking; entrance or escape by a leak: »The continuing leakage was the result of a long crack in the pipe. 2. that which leaks in or out: »the privilege of battening on…the leakage of the tap room (Washington… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 7leak out — {v. phr.} To become known; escape. * /The famous beauty queen tried to keep her marriage a secret, but news of it soon leaked out./ …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 8leak out — {v. phr.} To become known; escape. * /The famous beauty queen tried to keep her marriage a secret, but news of it soon leaked out./ …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 9leak — [n] opening; seepage through opening aperture, chink, crack, crevice, decrease, destruction, detriment, drip, drop, escape, expenditure, exposure, fissure, flow, hole, leakage, leaking, loss, outgoing, percolation, pit, puncture, short circuit,… …

    New thesaurus

  • 10leak — verb. The transitive meaning ‘to disclose (secret information) intentionally’ is, apart from an isolated example of 1859, a 20c use, although the practice is doubtless a lot older. It is related to, if not a development of, the phrasal verb to… …

    Modern English usage