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  2. The earliest known use of the verb transude is in the mid 1600s. OED's earliest evidence for transude is from 1664, in the writing of John Evelyn, diarist and writer. transude is a borrowing from Latin.

  3. noun. transudatory (tranˈsudatory) adjective. Word origin. C17: from New Latin transūdāre, from Latin trans- + sūdāre to sweat. COBUILD frequency band. transude in American English. (trænˈsud; trænˈsjud) verb transitiveWord forms: tranˈsuded or tranˈsuding. to ooze or exude through pores or interstices, as blood serum through the vessel walls.

  4. Origin of transude 1. 165565; < New Latin trānsūdāre, equivalent to Latin trāns- trans- + sūdāre to sweat. Discover More. Example Sentences. The sun shone on his dilapidated garments and on his purple skin; it was almost black and seemed to transude blood. From Project Gutenberg.

  5. British English. /ˈtrɑːnsjʊdət/ /ˈtransjʊdət/ See pronunciation. Where does the noun transudate come from? Earliest known use. 1870s. The earliest known use of the noun transudate is in the 1870s. OED's earliest evidence for transudate is from 1876, in a translation by J. Van Duyn and E. C. Seguin. transudate is a borrowing from Latin.

  6. transude. tran-sūd′, v.i. to ooze or pass through the pores or interstices of a membrane or substance.— pr.p. transūd′ing; pa.p. transūd′ed. — n. Transudā′tion.— adj. Transū′datory. [L. trans, through, sudāre, to sweat.]

  7. etymology of the word transude From New Latin transūdāre, from Latin trans- + sūdāre to sweat. Etymology is the study of the origin of words and their changes in structure and significance.

  8. Transude is a verb that describes the process of a substance or fluid gradually passing through a membrane or porous surface, often due to osmotic pressure or other kinds of force. The term is often used in biology or medicine to describe fluids seeping through tissues or cells.

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