let blood

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English[edit]

Verb[edit]

let blood (third-person singular simple present lets blood, present participle letting blood, simple past and past participle let blood)

  1. (transitive, now archaic or historical) To extract blood from (a person, part of the body etc.). [from 9th c.]
  2. (intransitive, now archaic or historical) To bleed someone; to extract blood from a person, part of the body etc. for supposed therapeutic purposes, especially by phlebotomy. [from 10th c.]
  3. (figurative) To make (someone or something) bleed, in a general sense; to cut; to kill. [from 13th c.]

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