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- Dictionarydivulge/dʌɪˈvʌldʒ/
verb
- 1. make known (private or sensitive information): "I do not want to divulge my plans at the moment"
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to make something secret known: Journalists do not divulge their sources. [ + question word ] The CEO refused to divulge how much she earned. Synonyms. disclose formal. reveal. Compare. expose. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Revealing secrets & becoming known. anti-secrecy. backchannel. bare your heart/soul idiom.
- English (US)
DIVULGE meaning: 1. to make something secret known: 2. to...
- Divulged
DIVULGED definition: 1. past simple and past participle of...
- Simplified
DIVULGE translate: 泄露,透露(秘密). Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Traditional
DIVULGE translate: 洩露,透露(秘密). Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Divvy
DIVVY definition: 1. a stupid person: 2. a stupid person: 3....
- Vietnamese Translation
DIVULGE translate: tiết lộ. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Translate English to Malay
divulge translate: mendedahkan. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Divorcee
DIVORCEE definition: 1. a man or a woman who is divorced and...
- English (US)
The meaning of DIVULGE is to make known (something, such as a confidence or secret). How to use divulge in a sentence. Did you know? Synonym Discussion of Divulge.
Divulge definition: to disclose or reveal (something private, secret, or previously unknown).. See examples of DIVULGE used in a sentence.
Definitions of divulge. verb. make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret. synonyms: break, bring out, disclose, discover, expose, give away, let on, let out, reveal, unwrap. break, get around, get out. be released or become known; of news. see more. Cite this entry.
Divulge means to make known or disclose something private or secret. Learn how to use this verb in different contexts, with synonyms and pronunciation guides, and see examples from the Guardian and other sources.
divulge. ( daɪˈvʌldʒ) vb. ( tr; may take a clause as object) to make known (something private or secret); disclose. [C15: from Latin dīvulgāre, from di- 2 + vulgāre to spread among the people, from vulgus the common people] diˈvulgence, diˈvulgement n. diˈvulger n.
divulge something (to somebody) | divulge what, whether, etc… to give somebody information that is supposed to be secret synonym reveal. Police refused to divulge the identity of the suspect. She refused to divulge the information. The plans must not be divulged to anyone.