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- Transpire is a verb that has two main meanings123:
- To occur, happen, or take place12. For example, "The event transpired without any problems."
- To become known or revealed4123. For example, "It transpired that he had lied about his identity."
Learn more:✕This summary was generated using AI based on multiple online sources. To view the original source information, use the "Learn more" links.verb (used without object), tran·spired, tran·spir·ing. to occur; happen; take place. to emit or give off waste matter, watery vapor, etc., through the surface, as of the body or of leaves. to escape, as moisture or odor, through or as if through pores. to be revealed or become known. verb (used with object), tran·spired, tran·spir·ing.www.dictionary.com/browse/transpireIf it transpires that something has happened, this fact becomes known: It later transpired that he had known about the plan from the beginning. [ I ] to happendictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/learner-english/…transpire verb (BECOME KNOWN) Add to word list [ I ] formal If it transpires that something has happened, this previously secret or unknown fact becomes known:dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/transpireTranspire (based on Latin spirare, meaning "to breathe") was originally used technically to describe the passage of vapor through the pores of a membrane (such as the skin). From this use developed the figurative sense: "to escape from secrecy" or "to become known."www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/transpire - People also ask
- verbtranspires (third person present)
- prove to be the case:"as it transpired, he was right"
- (it transpires)(of a secret or something unknown) come to be known; be revealed:"Yaddo, it transpired, had been under FBI surveillance for some time"Similar:become knownbecome apparentbe revealedbe disclosedbe discoveredbe uncoveredleak outbe made public
- botany(of a plant or leaf) give off water vapor through the stomata.
Originlate Middle English (in the sense ‘emit as vapor through the surface’): from French transpirer or medieval Latin transpirare, from Latin trans- ‘through’ + spirare ‘breathe’. Sense 1 (mid 18th century) is a figurative use comparable with ‘leak out’. Explore further
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TRANSPIRE definition in American English - Collins Online …
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TRANSPIRE | definition in the Cambridge Learner’s Dictionary
TRANSPIRED | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
TRANSPIRING | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary