0 past simple and past participle of ooze
1 to flow slowly out of something through a small opening, or to slowly produce a thick sticky liquid:
Television has oozed the good life at us, but what it portrays on the screen is not happening now in the balance sheets.
It oozed with complacency and was wrong in tone and content.
Morals oozed out of every word he said.
Confidence has oozed away and small businesses face an ever worsening prospect.
They have positively oozed compassion and high-minded rhetoric, and they have scattered caring soundbites through every speech like golden hailstones, but we have not heard what they would do.
This may mean that it oozed out the top, or perhaps that water came from holes in its side.
Without leaves the stems may sometimes be identified by occasional black marks where its milky sap may have oozed and dried.
The king then noticed a blood like fluid oozed out from that rock.