blurting (verb)

  • 1Spanish profanity — Joder redirects here. For the community in Nebraska, see Joder, Nebraska. This article is a summary of Spanish profanity, referred to in the Spanish language as lenguaje soez (low language), maldiciones (curse words), malas palabras (bad words),… …

    Wikipedia

  • 2Joe Biden — Biden redirects here. For other uses, see Biden (disambiguation). Joe Biden …

    Wikipedia

  • 3blurt — (v.) 1570s, probably echoic. Related: blurted; blurting. As a noun, 1570s, probably from the verb …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 4blurt — [[t]blɜ͟ː(r)t[/t]] blurts, blurting, blurted VERB If someone blurts something, they say it suddenly, after trying hard to keep quiet or to keep it secret. [V with quote] I was looking for Sally , he blurted, and his eyes filled with tears. [Also… …

    English dictionary

  • 5blurt — UK [blɜː(r)t] / US [blɜrt] or blurt out UK / US verb [transitive] Word forms blurt : present tense I/you/we/they blurt he/she/it blurts present participle blurting past tense blurted past participle blurted to say something suddenly and without… …

    English dictionary

  • 6blurt out — blurt UK [blɜː(r)t] / US [blɜrt] or blurt out UK / US verb [transitive] Word forms blurt : present tense I/you/we/they blurt he/she/it blurts present participle blurting past tense blurted past participle blurted to say something suddenly and… …

    English dictionary