transpire
verb /trænˈspaɪə(r)/
  /trænˈspaɪər/
(formal)Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they transpire |    /trænˈspaɪə(r)/   /trænˈspaɪər/  | 
| he / she / it transpires |    /trænˈspaɪəz/   /trænˈspaɪərz/  | 
| past simple transpired |    /trænˈspaɪəd/   /trænˈspaɪərd/  | 
| past participle transpired |    /trænˈspaɪəd/   /trænˈspaɪərd/  | 
| -ing form transpiring |    /trænˈspaɪərɪŋ/   /trænˈspaɪərɪŋ/  | 
- [transitive] (not usually used in the progressive tenses) transpire that… if it transpires that something has happened or is true, it is known or has been shown to be true
- It transpired that the gang had had a contact inside the bank.
 - This story, it later transpired, was untrue.
 
 - [intransitive] to happen
- You're meeting him tomorrow? Let me know what transpires.
 
 - [intransitive, transitive] transpire (something) (biology) when plants or leaves transpire, water passes out from their surface
 
Word Originlate Middle English (in the sense ‘emit as vapour through the surface’): from French transpirer or medieval Latin transpirare, from Latin trans- ‘through’ + spirare ‘breathe’. Senses 1 and 2 (mid 18th cent.) are figurative uses comparable with “leak out”.