Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at divulge.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Divulge.
Examples
-
Which, by the way, certainly seem to have included one Matt Drudge See, for example, this heart-pounding headline from March 18, 2004: “TSA To Require Airlines To Divulge Passenger Records ...”
-
VIEW FAVORITES yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = 'Swiss Bank UBS to Divulge at Least 4,450 Account Names'; yahooBuzzArticleSummary = 'UBS -- Switzerland\'s largest bank -- is expected to turn over the names of Americans who controlled 4,450 accounts that are currently open or have been closed.
OpEdNews - Quicklink: Swiss Bank UBS to Divulge at Least 4,450 Account Names 2009
-
Divulge the shame you felt when your classmates mocked you for graduating first in your class.
-
Divulge something about yourself that you would be proud for others to know.
-
Over 100 Biotech Labs Refuse To Divulge Operations Having Germ Warfare Potential yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = 'Over 100 Biotech Labs Refuse To Divulge Operations Having Germ Warfare Potential'; yahooBuzzArticleSummary = 'Article: More than a hundred university, hospital, government, and corporate biotech labs having germ warfare capability are not disclosing their operations as required by law.
Over 100 Biotech Labs Refuse To Divulge Operations Having Germ Warfare Potential 2007
-
Secondly YOU act as if you KNOW all the Secrets of the Universe, I will ASK you to please Divulge such beginnings, and meanings, Pysically or MetaPhysically.
-
Divulge something about yourself that you would be proud for others to know.
-
Divulge the shame you felt when your classmates mocked you for graduating first in your class.
-
Divulge can be tracked back to the Latin vulgus, “mob”; it means “to make known to the multitude,” with the whiff of a suggestion that the informant should have kept his information to himself.
No Uncertain Terms William Safire 2003
-
Divulge can be tracked back to the Latin vulgus, “mob”; it means “to make known to the multitude,” with the whiff of a suggestion that the informant should have kept his information to himself.
No Uncertain Terms William Safire 2003
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.