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Discover LudwigThe word "belch" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to describe a sound or action associated with the release of air or gas from the stomach. For example: After eating a large meal, Joe belched loudly.
Dictionary
belch
verb
To expel (gas) loudly from the stomach through the mouth.
synonyms
Exact(55)
Then Speech was mannerly, an Art, Like learning not to belch or fart: I cannot settle which is worse, The Anti-Novel or Free Verse.
Over the next two decades or so, China will belch out nearly as much CO2 as it did over the entire previous 160 years combined.
Inside its cavernous buildings, giant furnaces belch flames and steam as the elements meet, while huge rollers squeeze fat steel slabs into elegant gleaming rolls.Europe has six of the world's ten biggest steel companies.
In order to continue using this domestic source while mitigating global warming, carbon dioxide must be captured at the power plant and stuffed safely underground before it can belch into the atmosphere.But the politics and economics that made CCS attractive a few years ago have changed dramatically, both in America and elsewhere.
This era began with a huge burst of volcanic activity that supplied a giant belch of sulphur-rich gases into the atmosphere, transforming the planet into a very acidic environment.
This partly explains why so many of them continue to operate illegally.At Aspai, a dozen or so dredging machines belch out thick exhaust.
Similar(5)
In a celebrity version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, she lost the chance of winning £250,000 by failing to recognise Sir Toby Belch as a character in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night.
Growth will slow in America as more programmes there hit a product-placement ceiling and start to annoy viewers, says Michael Belch, a product-placement expert at San Diego State University.
He developed characters from brief suggestions in his source (Mercutio, Touchstone, Falstaff, Pandarus), and he developed entirely new characters (the Dromio brothers, Beatrice and Benedick, Sir Toby Belch, Malvolio, Paulina, Roderigo, Lear's fool).
He portrayed Sir Toby Belch in a musical adaptation of William Shakepeare's Twelfth Night for the Stratford Shakespeare Festival (2011); a film of the production was released in 2012.
"O mistress," sung by Robert Armin in the role of Feste, is directed toward the aging Sir Toby Belch and Sir Andrew Aguecheek; the lyrics touch on all the themes of the play and even hint at Viola's transgendered disguise in the phrase "that can sing both high and low".
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