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Discover LudwigThe word "blurt" is correct and usable in written English.
It is usually used to describe an abrupt, unplanned outburst of speech or emotion. Example sentence: He was overcome with emotion and blurt out his true feelings.
Dictionary
blurt
verb
To utter suddenly and unadvisedly; to speak quickly or without thought; to divulge inconsiderately — commonly with out.
Exact(60)
The Tory leader demanded total secrecy and asked only to be given the barest details for fear that he would blurt it out "unplanned in an interview".
"Uno pocito," he managed to blurt out.The stardom money was burned on fancy cars a white Rolls-Royce, a Lamborghini, a Maserati on fancy women, "1,001 of them", and on his ever-expanding tribe of siblings, illegitimate children, nephews, nieces and cousins for marriages, burials, first communions, food.
If the word "red" is written in blue, say, the participants must resist the natural impulse to blurt out "red" and pause to think that the answer ought to be "blue".
This manifests itself in incessant verbal and physical "tic-ing", an uncontrollable urge to blurt out nonsense phrases, touch surfaces and rearrange objects.
This is ridiculous .At Zlote Tarasy, Warsaw's Xanadu of shopping, screens usually blurt out adverts for computer games and handbags.
"Kind questions are designed to lull your quarry into a conversational mood," she writes, so that by the time the cruel questions arise the subject "will find it hard to duck and may blurt out a quotable nugget".
In raging, humorous polemics like "James Taylor Marked for Death," Bangs savaged the artistic pretensions and virtuosic self-indulgence of the hippie aristocracy and formulated a countervision of rock as a raw, spontaneous blurt of emotion untrammeled by taste or skill.
On the other, you get the feeling he revels in it; that he himself is that "worst", the most willing to blurt out the unsayable, and the unlikely giggle he occasionally lapses into despite himself suggests he knows he's walking a tightrope on the edge of acceptable taste.
I'm a bit nervous that I'll blurt this out and cause a scene.
From Charne Rochford's guileless Macduff to student Susanna Buckle's gentle Lady in Waiting, Matthew Rose's towering, glowering Banquo, the grimiest blurt of amateur trombones and the sweet voices of the children, Blackheath should be proud.
"It suggests all you do is blurt your feelings.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com