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gabble
[gab-uhl]
verb (used without object)
to speak or converse rapidly and unintelligibly; jabber.
(of hens, geese, etc.) to cackle.
verb (used with object)
to utter rapidly and unintelligibly.
noun
rapid, unintelligible talk.
any quick succession of meaningless sounds.
gabble
/ ˈɡæbəl /
verb
to utter (words, etc) rapidly and indistinctly; jabber
(intr) (of geese and some other birds or animals) to utter rapid cackling noises
noun
rapid and indistinct speech or noises
Other Word Forms
- gabbler noun
- outgabble verb (used with object)
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of gabble1
Example Sentences
And Lucky’s monologue—veering inanely through realms including religion, academics and sports—is delivered by Mr. Thornton not, as it usually is, as a galloping pile of gabble, but with a musing seriousness.
Hugo House is steamy by comparison, a hotbed of nerves and gabble.
“Trust,” I say, gabbling in the release of endorphins, in a delirium, lying on my back on the wide, flat rock.
Harvey’s first collaboration with John Parish, Dance Hall at Louse Point, at its most strange and unpredictable: a gabbled, whispered vocal over a chaotic backing that occasionally resolves into something like an alt-rock chorus.
The furiously gabbling crowd is a challenge to his sales craft: “I can speak Black Friday,” the narrator says.
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