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13:48
does ''Blurt out'' mean to say something unintentionally?
14:44
@DanielRigg yes
@CowperKettle okay,just to be sure,why?
14:56
@CowperKettle hello?
AIQ
AIQ
15:13
blurt out something: to say something suddenly, and without thinking of the results.
Cambridge.
@AIQ but still means to say something unintentionally?
AIQ
AIQ
If I say something "unintentionally" that means I did not intend to say that (and most likely that I was not thinking of the results). However, I can say something intentionally but without thinking of the results.
I can say the F-word purposefully to hurt someone (but I may not have thought of them punching me afterwards)
@AIQ then you don't mean blurt means to say something unintentionally?
AIQ
AIQ
so I would not say blurt out means to say something unintentionally all the time.
@AIQ then it doesn't mean to say something unintentionally?
AIQ
AIQ
15:19
not all the time and not strictly.
@AIQ no I mean are you saying it doesn't mean to say something unintentionally?
@AIQ why are you saying it doesn't mean to say something unintentionally?
AIQ
AIQ
I already said it - it does not strictly mean "to say something unintentionally". Something "unintentional" can be blurted out just as something "intentional"
@AIQ what words mean ,mainly and strictly, to say something unintentionally?
randomly
if you say something randomly you have no reason, right?
@DanielRigg does that^ make sense?
"don't just randomly blurt out an answer"
@skullpatrol what are other words that mean to say something unintentionally?
15:34
7 mins ago, by skullpatrol
randomly
I said other words not that only word you said
haphazardly
aimless.
arbitrary.
careless.


disorganized.
erratic.
helter-skelter.
@skullpatrol what about ''blurt'' as well?
abruptly, impulsively
@skullpatrol but ''blurt'' means to say something unintentionally?
15:41
not always
@skullpatrol what do you mean not always?
To blurt out something is to say something suddenly and without thinking about the effect it will have
@skullpatrol yes but can mean to say something unintentionally?
To unintentionally say something is to say something without intention
Noun: intention (countable and uncountable, plural intentions)
  1. The goal or purpose behind a specific action or set of actions.
  2. (Can we date this quote by Samuel Johnson and provide title, author's full name, and other details?) (but see Apocryhpha)
  3. Hell is paved with good intentions.
  4. “My Continental prominence is improving,” I commented dryly. ¶ Von Lindowe cut at a furze bush with his silver-mounted rattan. ¶ “Quite so,” he said as dryly, his hand at his mustache. “I may say if your intentions were known your life would not be worth a curse.”
  5. (obsolete) Tension; straining, stretching.
(4 more not shown…)
Adverb: unintentionally (comparative more unintentionally, superlative most unintentionally)
  1. In an unintentional manner; not intentionally.
  2. 1847, Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre, 1st edition, volume II, chapter V, page 132
  3. "Oh, no! Mason will not defy me; nor knowing it, will he hurt me—but, unintentionally, he might in a moment, by one careless word, deprive me, if not of life, yet for ever of happiness."
@skullpatrol look I'm asking if ''to blurt out'' means to say something unintentionally?
15:52
''to blurt out'' = "to say it fast"
I blurted out the first thing that came to my mind.
0
Q: Why is my username user20445 in this SE site while in all other SE websites it is "aminabzz"?

user20445 I have a question about my English Language Learners Stack Exchange post: Should we expect every non-English speaker to use an acceptable accent when speaking English?

@skullpatrol please answer properly like: yes it can mean to say something unintentionally
yes it can mean to say something unintentionally; but I can also blurt out something intentionally
@skullpatrol okay then ''blurt out'' can mean intentionally or unintentionally
"blurt-out" is how you say something
"intension" is why you say something
35 mins ago, by skullpatrol
@DanielRigg does that^ make sense?
16:07
@skullpatrol yes.What about ''to say something unexpectedly'' as well is it similar as ''to say something unintentionally''?
intension belongs to the speaker, but expectation belongs to the listener
replace "blurt" with "shout"
as a first approximation, it tells you how it was said
 
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[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Offensive answer detected, toxic answer detected (158): What verb to use with the word 'breach'? 'Seal'? by Fermichem on ell.SE
 
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