divulge in English

verb
1
make known (private or sensitive information).
I am too much of a gentleman to divulge her age
synonyms:discloserevealtellcommunicatepass onpublishbroadcastproclaimexposeuncovermake publicgive awaylet slipspill the beans aboutlet on aboutlet the cat out of the bag about

Use "divulge" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "divulge" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "divulge", or refer to the context using the word "divulge" in the English Dictionary.

1. I cannot divulge how much it cost.

2. He swore never to divulge the secret.

3. Journalists do not divulge their sources.

4. Officials refuse to divulge details of the negotiations.

5. The other three companies refused to divulge their plans.

6. Hill refused to divulge the cost of FoxTrax.

7. But he declined to divulge where he would slash spending.

8. I do not want to divulge where the village is.

9. He refused to divulge any information regarding the man's whereabouts.

10. And yet he refused to divulge Father O'Neill's whereabouts.

11. Some common synonyms of Betray are disclose, divulge, reveal, and tell

12. What does Betray mean? To divulge in a breach of confidence

13. But he'll have to divulge his accounting if FERC takes action.

14. They refused to divulge where they had hidden the money.

15. There also are secret ingredients that she will not divulge.

16. I'm afraid I cannot divulge what Jameson said to me.

17. Yet, many people readily divulge such information on their social networking page.

18. She refused to disclose/divulge any details about/of the plan.

19. The Pentagon refused to divulge what type of plane it was.

20. An angry employee could make libelous statements or divulge confidential company information.

21. Due to the obvious sensitivity of the issue he would not divulge any details.

22. Even the Pentagon don't know or won't divulge what type of plane it was.

23. The contract forbids employees to divulge details of this work to anyone outside the company.

24. 24 synonyms for Confide: tell, admit, reveal, confess, whisper, disclose, impart, divulge, breathe

25. More vehemently than ever, Mr Kohl refused to divulge the names of his other benefactors.

26. What It's Like to Have Your Butt Bleached: 5 Women Who've Done It Divulge

27. Barclays Bank would not divulge its figures despite repeated requests over a period of three weeks.

28. You just didn't say those sort of things, or divulge such secrets, about your wife.

29. Under that rule, Attorneys may not divulge their clients’ secrets, nor may others force them to

30. She would never divulge to Mattie that she had been second choice when Judge Tembleton could not do it.

31. But he did divulge that his own household fridge is not one of those on the Which recommended list.

32. There must have been a great deal more to it than Mama had been prepared to divulge to Vicky.

33. San Francisco police say the matter is still under investigation and refuse to divulge details of their probe.

34. When no arms were found, the brethren were cruelly tortured to make them divulge where arms were hidden.

35. To utter suddenly or inadvertently; divulge impulsively or unadvisedly (usually followed by out): He Blurted out the hiding place of the spy

36. Blabbing definition: divulge confidential information or secrets synonyms: disclose, bring out, break, let on, expose, spill, reveal, spill the beans, sing, blab

37. I have only to break her down... make her admit she's protecting somebody... and then force her to divulge his identity.

38. To utter suddenly or inadvertently; divulge impulsively or unadvisedly (usually followed by out): He Blurted out the hiding place of the spy.

39. Blabbed definition: divulge confidential information or secrets synonyms: disclose, bring out, break, let on, expose, spill, reveal, spill the beans, sing, blab

40. To utter suddenly or inadvertently; divulge impulsively or unadvisedly (usually followed by out): He Blurted out the hiding place of the spy.

41. And, as your Highness knows, a man will always divulge the truth first to his mistress, and only afterwards, if at all, to his wife.

42. Acquaint verb tell, reveal, advise, inform, communicate, disclose, notify, enlighten, divulge, familiarize, apprise, let (someone) know I want to Acquaint myself with your abilities and your weaknesses

43. Under the new law, government workers who divulge information that has been classified as state secrets can be sentenced to up to 10 years in prison, abetters up to five.

44. Blurt (third-person singular simple present Blurts, present participle blurting, simple past and past participle blurted) To utter suddenly and unadvisedly; to speak quickly or without thought; to divulge inconsiderately — commonly with out

45. The carrier confirmed that the circle flight required 25,000 points but did not divulge the number of Aeroplan seats and stated that the case was closed because the passenger had accepted compensation.

46. Refusing to divulge the god-parents' names (ticky-bets Bezzie Serena Williams is one.) Ordering privacy at Wimbledon's Number One court when she and two mates turned up to cheer on Ms W.

47. Blurt something out tell, reveal, give away, cry, exclaim, leak, spill, disclose, come out with, let out, spout (informal), babble, divulge, let slip, blab, utter suddenly Over the food, Richard Blurted out what was on …

48. There are many synonyms of Blurted which include Babble, Betray, Blab, Disclose, Divulge, Exclaim, Jabber, Leak, Reveal, Spout, Come Out With, Let Out, Give Away, Spill The Beans, Let Slip, Run Off At The Mouth, Let On, Cry Out, Burst Out With, Call Out, Let

49. Bewraying The Order of Nine Angles Preface The articles in this July 2015 compilation of Order of Nine Angles (O9A/ONA) texts divulge in detail the inner esotericism of the O9A, hidden from non-initiates as that esotericism has been, for decades, by the various outer, exoteric (sometimes heretical, sometimes adversarial) 'causal forms' and

50. Blackmail: 1 n extortion of money by threats to divulge discrediting information Type of: extortion the felonious act of extorting money (as by threats of violence) v obtain through threats Type of: extort obtain through intimidation v exert pressure on someone through threats Synonyms: blackjack , pressure Type of: act upon , influence , work