[ UK /blˈɑːðɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈbɫæðɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. foolish gibberish
VERB
  1. to talk foolishly
    The two women babbled and crooned at the baby
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How To Use blather In A Sentence

  • Let's go inside and drink coffee while we wait - likely the lords will keep us waiting all day before they blather their way to a decision. THE BROKEN GOD
  • Now, I can't help but wonder if these people have a quick look-see, utter ‘boring’ and move on, or whether they're actually reading anything I bother to blather on about in here.
  • And then there are the funny ones such as ning nong, doofus, blatherskite. Etymology – the origins of words « Write Anything
  • He was terrible by the way, blathering on about something.
  • On the baize, the balls roll on, but the former stars who now commentate cannot resist blathering about the Jester from Leicester or the Wizard of Wishaw. In praise of ... 'Whispering' Ted Lowe | Editorial
  • The old men blather on and on.
  • He's blathering, but in a constructive way: the big decisions have been right.
  • If you're interested in how I solved the writing problem I mentioned several days ago, look (behind the cut where lies lengthy writing neep in which I blather on about my work in order to avoid other pressing issues) When Good Scenes Go Bad, Redux
  • In doing so, Blatherwick has made you aware of the strange beauty and vulgarity of otherwise unnoticeable, routine human impulses.
  • She just let the woman blather on for a few minutes, nodding or smiling when it seemed appropriate to do so. GALILEE
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