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Word: blabbermouthed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...surgeon, at Kensington Palace stark naked except for diamond earrings and a fur coat; she liked to buy pregnancy tests as a joke; Burrell sneaked her lovers into the palace in the trunk of his car and gave them breakfast after she had left. The Sun dubbed him the "Blabbermouth Butler." But since he had always intended to keep this information secret, a court issued an injunction to block the Sun from blabbing any more on his behalf. The front-page splashes became ever more rococo. Several insinuated, based on little or no evidence, that Burrell, who is married with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Butler in Right Royal Ruckus! | 11/10/2002 | See Source »

...Mardi Gras figure 28. Churchillian gesture 29. Bloomers worn around the neck 30. Auto corp. that will extend health care to gay partners 31. Bill's partner 32. He spent more than $30 million on his New Jersey Senate nomination 34. High dudgeon 37. Reuben need 39. Hardly a blabbermouth 41. 1998 animated film 43. Phrase in disco names 44. Iron: prefix 45. He's at odds with 16-Down 47. OPEC units 48. Fool 49. Org. that will study cell-phone safety 50. Trent's predecessor 52. Simile center 53. Prefix with plunk or flop...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: News Quiz Crossword Jun. 26, 2000 | 6/26/2000 | See Source »

Well, there is one necessity on Henry's agenda. Bunny -- the unserious one, the blabbermouth, the buffoon -- begins to suspect the quartet of the killing in the field. In general Tartt shows a superior sense of pace, playing off her red herrings and foreshadowings like an old hand at the suspense game. The book's only lag occurs in her needlessly elaborate effort to turn Bunny from a likable pest into someone obnoxious enough for Richard to want to kill (for the others, fear of detection is enough). The cause of Bunny's mounting hysteria, of course, is simple...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Murder Midst The Ferns | 8/31/1992 | See Source »

...most of his acquaintances around Tucson, Charles Schmid Jr., 23, seemed more sick than sinister. A compulsive blabbermouth who prated indefatigably of his sexual and fistic derring-do, the squat (5 ft. 3 in.), sullen-faced high school dropout dyed his hair black, caked his face with makeup, and stuffed so much wadding in his boots to make him look taller that he could hardly walk. Yet among the odd collection of restless, thrill-hungry teen-agers who hang out in the garish juke joints and drive-ins along Tucson's East Speedway Boulevard (TIME, Nov. 26), swart, blue...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Arizona: Growing Up in Tucson | 3/11/1966 | See Source »

...Fisher's comment that Dr. Masters is a blabbermouth who resorts to sensationalism is inaccurate, unfair, and contrary to the true picture. Dr. Masters gave a preliminary report of his research to a special audience of psychologists at the American Psychological Association convention in St. Louis in 1961. The care, caution and propriety displayed by Dr. Masters and his associate could not have been improved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Jan. 28, 1966 | 1/28/1966 | See Source »

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