[ US /dɪsˈɡɔɹdʒ/ ]
[ UK /dɪsɡˈɔːd‍ʒ/ ]
VERB
  1. eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth
    The patient regurgitated the food we gave him last night
    After drinking too much, the students vomited
    He purged continuously
  2. cause or allow (a solid substance) to flow or run out or over
    spill the beans all over the table
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How To Use disgorge In A Sentence

  • Cars drew up to disgorge a wedding party.
  • All three buses stopped outside the pool, and each disgorged a tumbling jumbling pile of wee kiddies, clutching their swim-bags and chattering like flocks of birds on a nature programme.
  • `Open, sesame," Rhodes said stolidly, and Virtual One began to disgorge streaming ribbons of data into the air.
  • The pipe disgorges sewage into the sea.
  • It is known to harass birds as large as Red-tailed Hawks or vultures, causing them to disgorge food.
  • At the base of the camp, a recent avalanche had disgorged burlap sacks, old door frames, mortar boxes, rolls of bailing wire, and pieces of fiberglass.
  • By now the cross-country vehicle had disgorged its complement of heavyweight occupants, also dressed in identical blue suits.
  • Circling seagulls swooped down and ate what Agnes had disgorged.
  • Instant cash, the product which is disgorged from ATM machines, could only be born in a network.
  • The court then concluded that the civil disgorgement remedy provides an appropriate "guidepost" for computing how much of the gain is attributable to the "deception" of insider trading. TheRacetotheBottom - Headline News
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