Divulge in a sentence as a verb

****, i didn't know you could choose _not_ to divulge salary history!

How about not having to divulge your credit card or bank account details to sellers?

When the conversation gets more interesting ad it's time to divulge the secret sauce, then ask for an NDA.

For every Snowden, a million young people happily divulge their entire lives on Facebook and don't care whether NSA is reading it.

I'm not going to divulge all my trade secrets here, but I've found a way to do something similar for my business, perhaps you can think of one for yours too.

That's more or less how he came off when I spoke to him a month before the site launched, except he was more coy, refusing to divulge what he was actually working on.

Imagine if the US Army wouldn't divulge the capabilities of a new fighter jet to the very people who were authorizing the money for its construction.

Every article claims Vienna has nice people but doesn't divulge either the nationality and cultural background of the reviewer, nor the way said reviewer interacted with viennese people.

I don't think molecular biologists would literally poison each other rather than divulge their sequence data prior to its publication in a major journal, but they'd consider it.

IP Nav told us that they could not divulge the details of their infringement claims not even the patent numbers or the patent owner unless we entered into a forbearance agreement basically, an agreement that we would not sue them.

In order to comply with GPLv3, Ubuntu thinks it would then have to divulge its private key so that users could sign and install modified software on the restricted system.> This fear is unfounded and based on a misunderstanding of GPLv3.

Divulge definitions

verb

make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret; "The auction house would not disclose the price at which the van Gogh had sold"; "The actress won't reveal how old she is"; "bring out the truth"; "he broke the news to her"; "unwrap the evidence in the murder case"