Tattle in a sentence as a noun

" If I stole your wallet, I'm sure you'd "tattle" on me.

But I really don't give a toss about tittle tattle stories like babies, etc.

That said, it seems silly/over-reacting to create a tattle-tale post here.

Basically these sites provide tittle tattle to fill the 24hr news channels.

Now, let's say someone was, rightfully, offended and then went and tattle tailed to Twitter or the legal authorities.

Is there a legitimate way to "tattle" on competitors that are blatantly abusing SEO practices?

I've only connected with current colleagues when I know they won't tattle, and never connected with a boss until I've given notice.

I'm not saying that what the kid is wrong, but don't tattle on him flat-out... just tell him to stop before you go to the teacher and the whole class finds out and the kid gets expelled.

Your use of the term "tattle" makes it sound like perhaps you've done something someone didn't like in the past, and they reported it, and you had to deal with the consequences.

Tattle in a sentence as a verb

I disagree though, that 'negative results' fit into the tattle-tale category in your analogy, and think it is also a bit naive to dismiss charisma.

I will never understand why Adria did what she did, from all i read she is an intelligent person yet she chose to do the most childish thing in the world... tattle the kid that said "penis" in class.

[1] When anyone else does it, its 'titter tattle'.This is why I treat the Guardian with a pinch of salt, its not like Sun or Mirror or News of the Screws, they sometimes get some good stuff correct before other sources.

I've thought about it more, and I think my question is more appropriately, "why are corporations so sex-negative"?Adria Richards didn't tattle on these two men because she is a "feminist".

These requirements for pairing and that everyone working in sensitive intelligence work will now have to spy and tattle on their fellow workers is interesting in that it includes the Peace Corps in the directive.

In the same way, one day, when someone will discover life on other planets or something similar, there will be people telling us, that people knew that life exists outside of the Earth.\nEvidence is one crucial point that is necessary to be able to distinguish tattle from facts.

You have the cool kids on track for the nobel, the weirdoes in their corner pushing the boundaries of what is possible, the "jocks"/ career scientists who manage to turn a couple of tricks and some charisma into a living, and finally the tattle-tales who seem to **** everyone off with their negative results.

Many see it as anti-BritishApologies if I've missed it somewhere in your post, but where are you getting this from?Much of the rest of the press is, rather strangely given their seemingly life-or-death battle to defend their right to print celebrity tittle-tattle, mostly siding with the government on this.

Tattle definitions

noun

disclosing information or giving evidence about another

See also: singing telling

verb

speak (about unimportant matters) rapidly and incessantly

verb

divulge confidential information or secrets; "Be careful--his secretary talks"