0 past simple and past participle of corrode
1 If metal corrodes, or if something corrodes it, it is slowly damaged by something such as rain or water:
Steel tends to corrode faster in a salty atmosphere.
Customary client relationships, corporate structures were corroded and uncomfortably complemented by social relations that could be expressed in monetary claims.
An abrupt failure can be caused by a power failure, loose or corroded contacts, or flaws or limitations in the data acquisition and processing system.
It was impossible to leave the concrete tiles in place because their copper wire fixings were heavily corroded.
Note thin, somewhat corroded vesicle walls and concentric folds.
An example of such a failure is where a contact on a switch is partially corroded.
To put oneself in the place of someone whose soul is corroded by affliction, or in near danger of it, is to annihilate oneself.
Crystals of euhedral sanidine and marginally corroded plagioclase reach up to 500 m in size and are usually extensively altered to kaolinite.
Residual phases were amphibole and corroded plagioclase.