Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit
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That means that it is brimming with charm, that there is a lot of charm in it.
Heard the expression?
If so, did you ever wonder about why ooze must mean a slow trickle when it comes to blood, while instead pointing to a profusion in the other end? Yes, I know that bleeding is another matter than charming me, but as you cans, there are heaps of people who use the expression " blood oozed profusely". Let me offer a few examples:
- ... blood oozed profusely from his right eye and nose. The man was a frequent visitor in Stacy's residence now was a prey and victim of ...
- Blood oozed profusely on bare grounds. Face swollen and arms left with lasting scars.
- I jumped to lean on him, touching him and crying for help as blood oozed profusely from his head.
- Butler fell and blood oozed profusely from his wound
- Blood oozed profusely like water from her nostrills, mouth and other parts of her body as she sat at a street corner in the city center of Accra
- Blood oozed profusely from her vaginalia. That's when others claimed that the pregnancy was aborted
- Blood oozed profusely from his neck, and he fainted when he came out of the toilet
- Blood oozed profusely from the cuts and when he called for help, a witness went to the scene and succeeded in snatching the knife from the ...
- Blood oozed profusely and so Frederick was rushed to the nearest hospital for treatment where he died
- Blood oozed profusely from the area of attachment when the leeches were re- moved. Closer inspection showed deep wounds, circular to bulbous cavities ...
- blood oozed profusely from the gaping wound on his neck; his time was running out.
- .. blood oozed profusely from the wound.
- His left leg was gone, cut crudely from his body, and blood oozed profusely from the wound.
I could of course go on and on here, but it should be obvious that not everybody bows to your "correct dictionary meaning". Of course, you could claim that these are probably examples of people who misuse the British language, but there are authors and suchlike amongst the material, people who are very well read up on language matters.
But lets´look at a few others! This one is from the site actualfirstaid.com, a site devoted to medical matters:
Wounds to a major vein may "ooze" profusely.
This is from "AN UNCLASSIFIABLE TUMOR OF THE ESOPHAGUS", A Case Report by Victor Hay-Roe, M.D., Rogers Lee Hill, M.D., and W. Harold Chin, M.D., Honolulu, Hawaii. So we are dealing with medical doctors here and their language. The paper was written in 1959, by the way:
The patient was prepared for esophagectomy and, through an upper abdominal incision, the stomach and lower esophagus were mobilized. A right thoraootomy disclosed a lung densely adherent to the chest wall, and much bleeding was encountered in mobilizing it. The esophagus was freed and the tumor palpated within it, just inferior to the aortic arch. During the procedure, the blood continued to ooze profusely from the right thoracic cage and the patient required multiple transfusions.
This is from "Open Thoracic Surgery", by Marco Scarce, Alan D L Shine and Benedetta Bedetti:
"... very vascular structure that can ooze profusely."
This is from United States Armed Forces Medical Journal, the year is 1951:
A letter from his family physician stated that many methods of controlling hemorrhage were used, but he continues to ooze profusely from his gums."
You are of course at liberty to go on flat out denying that nobody with any sort of insight into language matters would ever use the phrase "ooze profusely" about blood flows. But the fact of the matter is that there are examples a plenty of how the phrase IS used, even by medically trained specialists and doctors writing academic papers.
To me, that trumps your dictionaries, because while they (and I won't read them all, just as I'm sure that you have not done either) recommend how we should use the language, my examples are all about how we actually DO just that.
If we must move further back in time, this is from the Old Bailey in June of 1846, concerning a manslaughter case:
In three or four hours after his decease the fluids filled the chest and throat, and oozed copiously out of the ears, nose, and mouth."
If you dislike all of this - and I am sure you do - you are as welcome to ask any questions of me on the adjacent "Prototypical life of a serial killer" thread. I suggest you don't start out by claiming that body in his right mind would use the expression if you do. You are going to have to wait for your turn, of course, I am not interested in taking on the whole flock of naysayers all at the same time.
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