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  1. Dictionary
    divulge
    /dʌɪˈvʌldʒ/

    verb

    • 1. make known (private or sensitive information): "I do not want to divulge my plans at the moment"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. 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.

  6. Divulge definition: to disclose or reveal (something private, secret, or previously unknown).. See examples of DIVULGE used in a sentence.

  7. 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.

  8. If you divulge a piece of secret or private information, you tell it to someone. Officials refuse to divulge details of the negotiations. American English : divulge / dɪˈvʌldʒ /