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English-Thai Dictionary

divulge

VT เปิดเผยความลับ  retell spin report poed-poei-kwam-lab

 

divulge to

PHRV บอก ความลับ ให้ กับ  bok-kwam-lab-hai-kab

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

DIVULGE

v.t.divulj. [L., to make public; the common people; people. ] 1. To make public; to tell or make known something before private or secret; to reveal; to disclose; as, to divulge the secret sentiments of a friend; to divulge the proceedings of the cabinet. Divulge is more generally applied to verbal disclosures, and publish to printed accounts. But they may be used synonymously. We may publish by words, and divulge by the press.
2. To declare by a public act; to proclaim. [Unusual. ]

 

DIVULGED

pp. Made public; revealed; disclosed; published.

 

DIVULGER

n.One who divulges or reveals.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

DIVULGE

Di *vulge ", v. t. [imp. & p. p. Divulged; p. pr. & vb. n. Divulging. ]Etym: [F. divulguer, L. divulgare; di- = dis- + vulgare to spread among the people, from vulgus the common people. See Vulgar. ]

 

1. To make public; to several or communicate to the public; to tell (a secret ) so that it may become generally known; to disclose; -- said of that which had been confided as a secret, or had been before unknown; as, to divulge a secret. Divulge not such a love as mine. Cowper.

 

2. To indicate publicly; to proclaim. [R.] God. .. marks The just man, and divulges him through heaven. Milton.

 

3. To impart; to communicate. Which would not be To them [animals ] made common and divulged. Milton.

 

Syn. -- To publish; disclose; discover; uncover; reveal; communicate; impart; tell.

 

DIVULGE

DIVULGE Di *vulge ", v. i.

 

Defn: To become publicly known. [R.] "To keep it from divulging. " Shak.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

divulge

di vulge |diˈvəlj, dī -daɪˈvəlʤ | verb [ with obj. ] make known (private or sensitive information ): I am too much of a gentleman to divulge her age. DERIVATIVES div ul ga tion |ˌdivəlˈgāSHən |noun, di vul gence |-jəns |noun ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense announce publicly ): from Latin divulgare, from di- widely + vulgare publish (from vulgus common people ).

 

Oxford Dictionary

divulge

divulge |dʌɪˈvʌldʒ, dɪ -| verb [ with obj. ] make known (private or sensitive information ): I am too much of a gentleman to divulge her age. DERIVATIVES divulgation |-ˈgeɪʃ (ə )n |noun divulgence noun ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense announce publicly ): from Latin divulgare, from di- widely + vulgare publish (from vulgus common people ).

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

divulge

divulge verb he refused to divulge Father O'Neill's whereabouts: disclose, reveal, tell, communicate, pass on, publish, broadcast, proclaim; expose, uncover, make public, give away, let slip; informal spill the beans about, let on about, let the cat out of the bag about. ANTONYMS conceal.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

divulge

divulge verb he refused to divulge Father O'Neill's whereabouts: disclose, reveal, make known, tell, impart, communicate, pass on, publish, broadcast, proclaim, promulgate, declare; expose, uncover, make public, go public with, bring into the open, give away, let slip, let drop, blurt out, leak, confess, betray, admit, come out with; informal spill the beans about, let the cat out of the bag about, let on about, tell all about, blow the lid off, squeal about; Brit. informal blow the gaff on; archaic discover, unbosom. ANTONYMS conceal.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

divulge

di vulge /dəvʌ́ldʒ |daɪ -/動詞 他動詞 かたく 【人などに 】秘密 私事など 〉を漏らす, 暴露する, 明らかにする «to » ; that節 /wh節 〗…ということ […か ]を暴く .