rattle+on
91rattle your cage — vp To annoy, bother. If the suspect won t talk, let s file some charges against him and rattle his cage. 1960s …
92rattle\ one's\ saber — v. phr. To threaten another government or country without subsequent acts of war. It is considered an act of demagoguery on the part of politicians to rattle their sabers. Compare: yellow journalism …
93rattle off — PHRASAL VERB If you rattle off something, you say it or do it very quickly and without much effort. [V P n (not pron)] Asked what English he knew, Mr Semko rattled off One, two, three ... [V P n (not pron)] Hendry, playing an afternoon match,… …
94rattle through — PHRASAL VERB If you rattle through something, you deal with it quickly in order to finish it. [mainly BRIT] [V P n] She rattled through a translation from Virgil s Aeneid …
95rattle about/around in — be in or occupy (an unnecessarily large space). → rattle …
96rattle on/away — talk rapidly and at length. → rattle …
97rattle sabres — threaten to take aggressive action. → rattle …
98rattle something off — say, perform, or produce something quickly and effortlessly. → rattle …
99rattle-brained — a. Giddy, noisy, wild, rattle headed …
100rattle-head — n. Chatterer, prater, gabbler, rattle pate (colloq.), giddy talker …