babblemouth

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From babble +‎ mouth.

Noun[edit]

babblemouth (plural babblemouths)

  1. One who babbles.
    • 1985 September 3, Scott Rosenberg, “Yuppie love: Down the upscale with Key Exchange”, in The Boston Phoenix, Boston, Mass., page 4, column 3:
      It’s a slow-dazzle performance that leaves you wishing the film would pair him up with Adams (a brief dalliance between them is inexplicably dropped) instead of sending his dancer wife, a neurotic babblemouth, back home to him.
    • 1987, Thea Astley, It’s Raining in Mango: Pictures from a Family Album, New York, N.Y.: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, →ISBN, page 183:
      He was a middle-aged babblemouth who talked computers and fad diets remorselessly, seasoning his monologues with plod monosyllables—Jung, Bach, Proust—managing to give them the intellectual weight of Ping-Pong balls.
    • 1988 January, Chris Claremont, “False Dawn!”, in The Uncanny X-Men (Marvel Masterworks), volume 15, number 225, published 2023, →ISBN:
      I WAS WONDERING WHEN YOU WOULD PAUSE FOR BREATH… …SO I MIGHT TRY TO GET A WORD IN EDGEWISE. / I GUESS SOMETIMES I DO TURN INTO A BABBLEMOUTH--SORRY.
    • 1989, Jonathan Gash [pseudonym; John Grant], The Very Last Gambado (Lovejoy), London: Collins, →ISBN, page 24:
      A babblemouth if I ever saw one. He beamed, fat and florid, through these thick hornrimmed specs. ‘You’re Lovejoy. Am I right or am I right?’ I was to learn he only gave the world the two choices. I said nothing, already knowing who I was.
    • 1993, Liam Maguire, Icarus Flying: The Tragical Story of Christopher Marlowe, Morden Park, Surrey: Ormond Books, →ISBN, page 88:
      The ferryman had not a good word for Ralegh – that know-all babblemouth – whom he blamed for fitting the Lisbon expedition out in Plymouth instead of Tilbury.
    • 1999, DeWanna Pace, A Taste of Honey, New York, N.Y.: Jove Books, →ISBN, page 249:
      “Quiet, babblemouths, or the bees will come and add a little more bounce to this old man’s strut!”
    • 2003, John L. Dole, The Piffles of Pope, Lincoln, Neb.: Writers Advantage, iUniverse, Inc., →ISBN, page 295:
      [] But I’m amazed that you could fall for a babblemouth with hairy legs, spouting feminist clichés, with a voice like a recycled valley girl. Really, Kelvin.” / “I suppose it was her energy. But she is a talker, for sure.” / “Yeah, and says mighty little of consequence.”
    • 2011, Salina Jivani, Once Again, Dare Empire eMedia Productions, →ISBN, page 68:
      Had Karen said something? / No, Karen may be a babblemouth, but she would never do that to me, Nicole realized, pushing the thought away.
    • 2015, Maggie MacKeever [pseudonym; Gail Burch], A Judgment of Vampires[1], Vintage Ink Press, published 2016, →ISBN:
      “Logan said that Irina Ross died in the year 1645.” / Logan was turning into a babblemouth.
    • 2018, Harry Downey, Time for a Short? A Collection of 22 Stories, [Morrisville, N.C.]: [Lulu.com], →ISBN, page 71:
      I’m an old loner by nature and don’t say much, but I’m a babblemouth compared to you.
  2. (rare) One who reveals or gives away information.
    • 1978, Official Report of the Debates of the House of Commons, volume 4, Canada, Parliament, House of Commons, page 3603:
      Mr. Diefenbaker: Why, then, has the minister been such a babblemouth outside the House of Commons? Has he been instructed by the Prime Minister to keep his mouth shut from now on and endeavour to delude parliament into reaching the conclusion that what he has been babbling about he must not explain because he knows he would be in difficulty? / • (1442) / Mr. Blais: Mr.Speaker, outside the House I have provided exactly the same sort of information as I have given in the House—
    • 1979, Anne McCaffrey, Dragondrums, New York, N.Y.: Atheneum, →ISBN, pages 19–20:
      “Have you mentioned these notions to anyone?” The Harper was insistent. / “Of course not, sir.” [] “I want to be certain of your discretion.” / “Menolly’ll tell you; I’m not a babblemouth.” He looked at Menolly for her support. / “Not normally, I’m sure. But you might be tempted to speak when taunted by others.”
    • 1990, Isobelle Carmody, The Farseekers (Obernewtyn Chronicles; 2), New York, N.Y.: Tor, published 2000, →ISBN, page 95:
      “But how is it no one knows this?” / Gilbert smiled, and it was not a pleasant smile. “Any seafarer stupid enough to talk of such things disappears, no doubt himself sold to the slavers. It’s a convenient way for the Council to rid itself of troublesome babblemouths.”

See also[edit]