1. seep - Noun
2. seep - Verb
Alt. of Sipe
Source: Webster's dictionaryWords used carelessly, as if they did not matter in any serious way, often allowed otherwise well-guarded truths to seep through. Douglas Adams
Humans are an embarrassing species w/ small glimmers of beauty that seep through the veil of bigotry&stupidity, every once in a small while. Frances Bean Cobain
...only a fraction of book learning will seep into practical life anyhow; and the more foolish the theory, the less of it. Carl von Clausewitz
Camel caravans bear witness guns to Caesar. Hordes crawl and seep inside the walls. The streets flow stone. Life goes on absorbing war. Violence kills the temple of no sex. Jim Morrison
Soft money will find its way and seep into the political system and corrode it, unless we plug every hole. Chuck Schumer
As an actor, you are aware of how a role can seep into your real life. Benedict Cumberbatch