blurt

[ UK /blˈɜːt/ ]
[ US /ˈbɫɝt/ ]
VERB
  1. utter impulsively
    He blurted out the secret
    He blundered his stupid ideas
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How To Use blurt In A Sentence

  • And the fact is that women just dig men who see clips of defenseless mother pigs stuffed in crates so small that they can't turn around, and then blurt out, "But, I love me some bacon! Josh Tetrick: Five Reasons Why Man = Meat
  • Like the invitation to run together, he blurted out such things as if he were completely unaware of how they might be interpreted, with a guileless innocence that couldn't help but put me at ease.
  • Then they are like, talking late one night and Tammy blurts it out.
  • As soon as Leslie's name was blurted out on a TV programme, the newspapers piled in.
  • I was so desperate for the object of my craving that I almost blurted out, ‘Are you going to buy that?’
  • You could tell he didn't think much of my work, though he was far too polite to blurt it out.
  • Yet there I was in thick make-up and bad costumes, willingly standing on the stage and blurting my few lines.
  • You could tell he didn't think much of my work, though he was far too polite to blurt it out.
  • It's a first-person blurt, a perspectival non sequitur given what follows. The Times Literary Supplement
  • He's taken the club as far as he can, a fairly standard issue snidey remark blurted out shortly after Liverpool's defeat at Blackpool on Wednesday night. Has Kenny Dalglish taken Liverpool as far as he can?| Barney Ronay
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