divulge
/daɪˈvʌldʒ/ (bre, ipa) · /daɪˈvʌldʒ/ (ame, ipa) · /də-ˈvəlj dī-/ (ame, mw)
divulge — 動詞
- divulgepresent simple I / you / we / they
- divulgeshe / she / it
- divulgedpast simple
- divulging-ing form
1. to tell secret or private information that you were trusted not to share with ot
洩露;透露
把秘密或機密告訴不該知道的人
to tell secret or private information that you were trusted not to share with others
Minho refused to divulge the name of his contact at the newspaper.
Minho 拒絕透露他在報社的聯絡人姓名。
refuse + to divulge + noun phrase
The employee was fired for divulging company pricing details to a competitor.
這名員工因向競爭對手洩露公司的定價細節而被開除。
passive: was fired for divulging [details] to [recipient]
Ayesha could not divulge what she had discussed with her lawyer.
Ayesha 不能洩露她與律師討論的內容。
The leaked report divulges private conversations between the two ambassadors.
這份外洩的報告洩露了兩位大使之間的私人對話。
Salma would never divulge a secret that a friend had told her in confidence.
Salma 絕不會洩露朋友私下告訴她的秘密。
- disclose
more neutral and less secretive in tone; often used in formal/legal contexts without implying betrayal
- reveal
broader, includes both secrets and non-secret facts; less emphatic about a breach of trust
- expose
stronger negative sense of revealing wrongdoing or scandal, usually to the public
- leak
implies gradual or unauthorized release, often to the media; can be done anonymously
文法句型
divulge + noun phrase
divulge + that-clause
divulge + wh-clause
用法筆記
Frequently used in negative constructions or with modal verbs (would not, could not, refuse to) to emphasize that someone is keeping a confidence. The person receiving the information is typically introduced by the preposition 'to'.