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The word 'rumours' is correct and usuable in written English
You can use it to refer to unverified reports or stories that are circulated without any confirmation of their accuracy. Example sentence: "There were all sorts of rumours circulating about his involvement in the scandal."
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That's how rumours start," Ibrahim shouted out.
Jason Gillespie has been shielded from questions regarding the job of England head coach, while his director of cricket at Yorkshire, Martyn Moxon, has admitted that the rumours linking the Australian with the role are in danger of becoming a permanent distraction to England's champion county.
The way he deals with the inevitable rumours about his sexuality ("Who does it hurt if someone thinks I'm gay"?) is wonderfully beguiling, and that's before we've even started on his humanitarian work in Darfur and Haiti, not to mention his friendship with President Obama, recently in the news following Clooney's bust-up with Las Vegas casino mogul Steve Wynn.
The new rules for registration have caused uproar in the party, with rumours that prominent activists had been refused accreditation.
There are rumours of shipwrecks buried hundreds of metres below where I was pitched, and tales of Vikings turning their ships in a nearby bay to redouble their efforts at invading Britain.
Rumours of Abdullah's death circulated on social media before Saudi TV began broadcasting Qur'anic verses – often a sign of bad news – and the announcement was made.
Asked if she believes the rumours that the girls may have crossed the border into Cameroon and been forced to marry their abductors, she shakes her head vehemently.
A lack of accommodation has kept Comporta under the radar, but that's changing, with the arrival last year of a gorgeous new hotel and rumours of a five-star Aman Resort on the horizon.
There have been rumours of a feature-length version of the popular BBC series for a number of years now, intensified recently by the reunion of the characters in Back and Forth, the short film currently showing at the millennium dome in the Skyscape cinema.
Bethune said there were rumours in Japan that Russia was planning to introduce a scientific whaling programme of it's own.
"Rumours started going around that something bad was going to happen, that they were going to target Aboriginal people," says Barb. "There's been a lot of incidents.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com