Concept cluster: Physical processes > Permeation
v
(transitive) To pour out or upon.
n
The pouring of liquid, especially as a hydrotherapy.
v
Alternative form of air-dry [To dry by exposure to the air.]
v
(transitive and intransitive) To reduce in volume by boiling.
n
The process by which a liquid is decanted.
v
(cooking) To make an infusion.
v
(Antarctica) To remove accreted snow before entering a building.
v
(intransitive) To lose its ice; to thaw.
v
(transitive) To remove the layer of fine liquid particles from the surface of (a window or mirror).
v
(transitive, computer graphics) To remove the snow from (an image).
v
(nonstandard) To thaw; unthaw; unfreeze.
v
(transitive) To subject to diafiltration.
v
(intransitive) To be spread over or through as in air, water, or other matter, especially by fluid motion or passive means.
v
To flow or pass gently or slowly; hence (figuratively) to be manifested gently or gradually.
n
That which falls in drops.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To cause or undergo diuresis.
n
Material that has been separated by draining
n
The act of drying.
v
Of a salt: to seep through some material (bricks, concrete, earth, rock, etc.) in a dissolved state, and then crystallize on a surface in a powdery form.
n
liquid that has effused
v
(transitive) To emit; to give off.
n
One who or that which effuses.
n
(chemistry) Process of gases passing through a hole or holes considerably smaller than the mean free path of the gas molecules.
v
to separate great and small particles through an upwardly flowing liquid or vapid stream
v
(chemistry) To give off (gas, such as oxygen or carbon dioxide during a reaction).
v
(intransitive) To become pervaded with something.
v
(transitive) To diffuse; to cause to be less concentrated or focused.
v
(transitive) To clarify (wine and beer) by filtration.
v
(transitive) To cover with varnish.
n
The natural, clean air from outside, as opposed to the relatively stuffy air inside.
v
In general, to act in a way which results in an object becoming completely permeated or impregnated by some quality.
v
(transitive) To saturate, or infuse.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To enter or insert into or through a window.
v
To filter or sift in.
v
(transitive) To cause (a liquid) to pass through something by filtration.
v
(transitive) To cover or spread with, or as if with, leaves.
v
(obsolete) To pour in; to infuse.
v
(transitive) To cause to become an element of something; to insert or fill.
n
(obsolete) The act of dipping into a fluid.
adj
(medicine) Applied via infusion
n
infusorium
v
(intransitive) To take or be administered something by means of injection, especially medicine or drugs.
n
A fluid injected or infused into the body
v
(transitive) To purge a soluble matter out of something by the action of a percolating fluid.
n
The liquid produced when water percolates through any permeable material
n
The seepage of relatively large amounts of material.
v
(transitive) To cause to diffuse by osmosis.
v
(ergative, sometimes figuratively) To move by osmosis.
v
To impregnate or treat with paraffin.
v
(transitive) To pass a liquid through a porous substance; to filter.
adj
That percolates
v
(transitive) To permeate or suffuse something, especially with a liquid or with light.
v
(transitive) To pass through the pores or interstices of; to penetrate and pass through without causing rupture or displacement; applied especially to fluids which pass through substances of loose texture
v
(transitive) To fill something with (a liquid) by pouring.
v
(transitive, chiefly biology, chemistry) To give to (something, especially a cell culture) an (increased) amount of a substance, such as a drug or an isotopic label, over a short time.
adj
Mitigating heat; cooling.
n
The material used in a reinfusion
n
The process by which something, especially a liquid, leaks through a porous substance; the process of seeping. (Also used figuratively: the process of diffusing.)
n
Liquid that has seeped.
v
(transitive, surgery) To divert the flow of a body fluid.
n
(Scotland, US) Alternative form of seepage [The process by which something, especially a liquid, leaks through a porous substance; the process of seeping. (Also used figuratively: the process of diffusing.)]
v
(intransitive) To become mixed with water, so that a true chemical combination takes place.
v
(metallurgy, transitive) To heat (a metal) before shaping it.
n
filtering, the process of passing something through a strainer.
n
Material that has suffused
v
(transitive) To spread through or over something, especially as a liquid, colour or light; to bathe.
v
To infuse over.
v
Alternative form of superfuse [(obsolete, transitive) To pour (something) over or on something else.]
v
To cause a solution to have more solute dissolved in it than it can stably contain at current conditions.
adj
A type of infiltration method used in abdominoplasty involving the injection of an amount of infiltrate roughly equal to the amount of aspirate to be removed.
v
(chemistry) To support in a liquid, as an insoluble powder, by stirring, to facilitate chemical action.
v
(intransitive) To gradually melt, dissolve, or become fluid; to soften from frozen
v
(obsolete, transitive) To strain, as if through a sieve.
v
(transitive) To pour liquid from one vessel into another.
n
The act of pouring liquid from one vessel to another.
v
To pass through a pore, membrane or interstice.
v
(obsolete) To pour out of one vessel into another.
v
(intransitive, rare, chiefly poetic) To cease being blue.
v
(transitive) To defrost something.
v
(intransitive, UK dialectal) To melt; thaw.
v
(intransitive) To flourish.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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