divulgement
1divulgement — index communication (statement), confession, disclosure (act of disclosing), divulgation, publicity Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton …
2divulgement — di vulge·ment || mÉ™nt n. act of divulging, act of revealing, disclosure, exposure …
3divulgement — di·vulge·ment …
4divulgement — noun the act of disclosing something that was secret or private • Syn: ↑divulgence • Derivationally related forms: ↑divulge, ↑divulge (for: ↑divulgence) • Hypernyms: ↑ …
5divulge — divulgement, n. divulger, n. /di vulj , duy /, v.t., divulged, divulging. to disclose or reveal (something private, secret, or previously unknown). [1425 75; late ME ( < AF) < L divulgare, equiv. to di DI 2 + vulgare to make general or common, to …
6revelation — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. disclosure, manifestation, exposition, revealment; Bible. See sacred writings. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [Divulgence] Syn. disclosure, discovery, announcement, admission, confession, divulgement, betrayal …
7divulgence — noun the act of disclosing something that was secret or private • Syn: ↑divulgement • Derivationally related forms: ↑divulge (for: ↑divulgement), ↑divulge • Hypernyms: ↑ …
8exposure — /ik spoh zheuhr/, n. 1. the act of exposing. 2. the fact or state of being exposed. 3. disclosure, as of something private or secret: the exposure of their invasion plans. 4. an act or instance of revealing or unmasking, as an impostor, crime, or …
9confession — con·fes·sion n 1: an act of confessing 2: an acknowledgment of a fact or allegation as true or proven; esp: a written or oral statement by an accused party acknowledging the party s guilt (as by admitting commission of a crime) compare admission; …
10disclosure — dis·clo·sure /dis klō zhər/ n: an act or instance of disclosing: as a: a lender s revelation of information to a consumer under the Truth in Lending Act that enables the consumer to make an intelligent decision about the loan b: the revelation to …