A haemorrhage of people or resources is a rapid loss of them from a group or place, seriously weakening its position. He said the move would definitely stem the haemorrhage of talent and enterprise from the colony
haem·or·rhage haemorrhages haemorrhaging haemorrhaged in AM, use hemorrhage1. A haemorrhage is serious bleeding inside a person's body. Shortly after his admission into hospital he had a massive brain haemorrhage and died These drugs will not be used if hemorrhage is the cause of the stroke
To haemorrhage people or resources means to lose them rapidly and become weak. You can also say that people or resources haemorrhage from a place or organization. Venice is haemorrhaging the very resource which could save it: its own people The figures showed that cash was haemorrhaging from the conglomerate
If someone is haemorrhaging, there is serious bleeding inside their body. I haemorrhaged badly after the birth of all three of my sons If this is left untreated, one can actually haemorrhage to death. + haemorrhaging haem·or·rhag·ing A post mortem showed he died from shock and haemorrhaging