She just sometimes blurts things out before she thinks, and I think we should try to forgive it and go on. |
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Daphne blurts the childlike word automatically, unthinking, and she rushes forward. |
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He memorises quotes from movies and blurts them out at inopportune moments. |
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The tea-towel-wearing shepherd totters on stage, blurts his lines and joins an angelic chorus in singing Little Donkey. |
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He blurts some knee-jerk retort about his music always being authentic and soulful then pauses and thinks about it a bit. |
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He blurts it out as though it were the most natural thing in the world. |
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Then they are like, talking late one night and Tammy blurts it out. |
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After all, what politician blurts out a major life decision while working a rope line? |
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He blurts things out without even meaning it, yet, he doesn't apologize! |
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This may occur when a young person simply blurts out a statement at the scene. |
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Jimmy can't bring himself to tell them how Carl died so Cain cold-heartedly blurts it out. |
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In the parable of the emperor's new clothes immortalised by Danny Kaye a little boy blurts out what everyone knows but no one dares to say: 'But Mummy, he hasn't got any clothes on. |
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The forward promptly blurts out an expletive, and Richards is done. |
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She describes corn dogs as something you can taste, when a kindergartner blurts out in English that he doesn't want a corn dog. |
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We have long had, for example, bizzies, bezzies, bevvies, blurts, bifters and scallies, scuffers, scone 'eads, tatty 'eads, twirlies and trainies. |
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