Seeping in a sentence as an adjective

All the energy the Iris building had was seeping out.

I don't know if their quality bar for videos also dropped, or if that's just my disappointment seeping through.

Pesticides are seeping into most groundwater in the central US. And you think we should scale our processes larger?

> At the same time, they need to line the storage pool with a material that will block it from seeping into the groundwater.

The ideas are slowly getting popular and seeping over to mainstream languages.

I noticed a terrible confirmation bias seeping in to my news when I got all my news from Internet sources.

It's pretty neat that category theory is seeping into more programming languages.

I think it's just trying to show a general pattern of limiting freedoms that has seeping into Canadian politics.

Only after about ten minutes of hard climbing, as your body temperature rises, does blood start seeping back into your fingers.

I live 30+ miles from any town of any size and there's still sufficient light pollution seeping over the horizon to make the hills stand out black against the sky.

Isn't a tl;dr meant to sum up the article?What it actually says is that whilst the cost is an issue, the primary reason is that these companies don't want Google ads seeping into their products.

Just as many aspects of functional programming are seeping into popular languages, so tiling window management is seeping into popular desktops.

Dikes won't stop water seeping up through the porous limestone which Miami is built on, nor are they practical for protecting the everglades or any of the existing fresh water and sewerage systemsI think the bigger problem is that the resources for dealing with this sort of catastrophe will be stretched very thin when every coastal city the world over is trying to deal with rising water levels.

Seeping definitions

adjective

leaking out slowly

See also: oozing oozy