Blurb in a sentence as a noun

TechCrunch covered us in a little blurb at the time.

I find the blurb on this Kickstarter very off putting.

More often than not, there's no little blurb that lets me know what their product even does.

* Have a cover blurb and Amazon description that grabs people.

The best case scenario is that you'll get a news blurb on local TV where you're portrayed as a sucker.

It may sound like a pseudoscience blurb, particularly if you aren't a color geek, but I sure didn't intend it to.

It's fishy because whenever you meet your funding goal, Kickstarter puts a blurb on your page saying "This project will be funded on "†.

The idea of having users submit stories and write blurbs was also fairly novel, and has led to several different directions.

It reminds me of the day the EU formed, warranting all of a two paragraph blurb somewhere in the back of the NYT. Or when the first successful manned commercial launch happened as part of the X-Prize, and all of zero people in a certain ivy league engineering school program had heard about it the next day.

Blurb definitions

noun

a promotional statement (as found on the dust jackets of books); "the author got all his friends to write blurbs for his book"

See also: endorsement indorsement