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Leak vs Wetting - What's the difference?

leak | wetting |

As nouns the difference between leak and wetting

is that leak is a crack, crevice, fissure, or hole which admits water or other fluid, or lets it escape while wetting is the act of making something wet.

As verbs the difference between leak and wetting

is that leak is to allow fluid to escape or enter something that should be sealed while wetting is .

As adjectives the difference between leak and wetting

is that leak is (obsolete) leaky while wetting is that makes (something) wet.

leak

English

Noun

(leak) (en noun)
  • A crack, crevice, fissure, or hole which admits water or other fluid, or lets it escape.
  • a leak in a roof
    a leak in a boat
    a leak in a gas pipe
  • The entrance or escape of a fluid through a crack, fissure, or other aperture.
  • The leak gained on the ship's pumps.
  • A divulgation, or disclosure, of information held secret until then.
  • The leaks by Chelsea Manning showed the secrets of the US military.
  • The person through whom such divulgation, or disclosure, occurred.
  • The press must have learned about the plan through a leak .
  • (computing) The gradual loss of a system resource caused by failure to deallocate previously reserved portions.
  • resource leak
    memory leak
  • An act of urination.
  • I have to take a leak .

    Verb

    (en verb)
  • To allow fluid to escape or enter something that should be sealed.
  • The faucet has been leaking since last month.
  • To reveal secret information.
  • ''Someone must have leaked it to our competitors that the new product will be out soon.

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • (obsolete) Leaky.
  • * 1596 , (Edmund Spenser), The Faerie Queene , VI.8:
  • Yet is the bottle leake , and bag so torne, / That all which I put in fals out anon […].

    Anagrams

    * * ----

    wetting

    English

    Verb

    (head)
  • Noun

    (en noun)
  • The act of making something wet.
  • * 1838 , George Adolphus Wigney, An Elementary Dictionary, Or, Cyclopaediae, for the Use of Maltsters, Brewers &c. (page 28)
  • It is usual to expect, that the first two or three wettings or steepings of grain, at the commencement of the malting season, will not make so good malt as succeeding steepings
  • The act of accidental urination on or in something.
  • Derived terms

    * bedwetting

    Adjective

    (-)
  • That makes (something) wet.
  • Derived terms

    * wetting agent