Bleeding in a sentence as a noun

To say "funny" things like "our eyes are bleeding!".

I spent grades 5-12 worried about bleeding through to my pants in school.

PayPal was bleeding over $10 million a month to chargebacks and fraud at one point.

Sit back, pick technology a couple of steps behind the bleeding edge, and focus on results.

Of course he doesn't want to leave, he just found someone bleeding in the street, it's natural to care about what happens to them.

Usually there were no new features you wanted, no bugs fixed, just the idea of being on the bleeding edge was "cool" enough.

For the record, I'm a fairly bleeding-heart liberal and former globalisation sceptic.

Scientists and their graduate students actually do work at the bleeding edge of science and routinely push beyond it with only a small, small, fraction of what these billionaires make.

The headline and the article made it look like WP7 was bleeding marketshare since launch which is okay with you since you don't like MS and so would like unquestioned FUD to be levied against it?

We knocked the boat over on it's side, the guy driving fell below and cut open his shin and was bleeding everywhere trying to get back up, the boat had no driver, and the 2nd guy on the boat froze like a deer in the headlights.

Exceptions if it is really arterial bleeding of cash, or some legal problems which expose you to ongoing civil or criminal liability, but if it's just the cost of a few EC2 instances, there is no excuse for not keeping it running until users have all comfortably migrated away.

For someone who isn't a regular contributor, following the guidelines to file a bug report in the way that Mozilla and co would like isn't the five minute job it should be, it's closer to a five hour job, and I think sometimes the developers/regular contributors/bleeding edge alpha testers don't even realise that.

Bleeding definitions

noun

the flow of blood from a ruptured blood vessel

See also: hemorrhage haemorrhage