及物动词
1. News men divulged that the two countries had met together secretly several times before they arrived at the peaceful agreement.
据新闻记者透露,这两个国家在达成和平协议前已经秘密接触多次了。
1. 泄露:Social engineering指操纵(manipulate)他人行动或者泄露(divulge)保密信息(confidential information),重要用在不用见面的网络世界. 注意这个词还有其它正面意思,如社会工程等. Spin在公关(public relations)领域有创造性地利用事实来影响公众意见(public opinion)的意思,
2. 泄漏,揭穿:divorce 离婚,分开 | divulge 泄漏,揭穿 | ebullient 兴高采烈,沸腾的
3. 泄漏,暴露:divulge: v.泄漏(秘密等) | divulge:泄漏,暴露 | dogmatist: n.教条主义者,武断者
4. 透露:规定stipulate | 透露divulge | 插手meddle
1. 泄露(秘密);透露(信息)
If you divulge a piece of secret or private information, you tell it to someone.
e.g. Officials refuse to divulge details of the negotiations...
官员们拒绝透露谈判的细节。
e.g. He was charged with divulging state secrets...
他被控泄露国家机密。
1. divulge
1. If his action does not divulge an important secret of the State, he shall not be punished under such disciplinary sanction.
2. The documents require him not to divulge classified information even upon leaving active duty, according to Johnson's letter.
3. divulge
3. Bi Jinbo, a CNS official refused to divulge further details in the yet to be released report.
4. And it seems that very few firms have ever showed any concern for the consequences of what is done with the confidential information they divulge.
5. divulge的翻译
5. But he would not divulge what it would be, saying that courtesy dictates that he should leave it to NCPA to make the announcement.
6. divulge的意思
6. Matthew's Parish School, where a spokesman declined to divulge any information.
7. While the above three sites divulge stories with graphic masterpieces, the solar exhibition hall will out into space itself.
8. The law should also force businesses to guard an individual's private information and not divulge or spread it to outsiders.
9. divulge什么意思
9. Not only does it divulge a list of " Who's Who " in your life, it also broadcasts the current status of who is with whom.
10. ElBaradei warned Iran Thursday the world would not wait forever for the Islamic republic to divulge the full extent and nature of its nuclear program.
verb
1. make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret
e.g. The auction house would not disclose the price at which the van Gogh had sold
The actress won't reveal how old she is
bring out the truth
he broke the news to her
unwrap the evidence in the murder case
Synonym: unwrap disclose let on bring out reveal discover expose break give away let out