Synonym: broadcast, circulate, gossip. Similar words: humor, tumor, forum, drum, decorum, spectrum, instrument, more. Meaning: ['ruːmə(r)] n. gossip (usually a mixture of truth and untruth) passed around by word of mouth. v. tell or spread rumors.
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91) In recent days came the rumor that Petrochina and Sinopec are getting ready to bid for part of Marathon Oil following its planned split-up.
92) This is the most fantastic rumor one could dream up.
93) There is a rumor going the rounds that Mr Wonton will be the new superintendent.
94) The rumor came from a tongue-in-cheek comment from Turner that he would colorize the film in order to bait critics of the process.
95) A rumor of a shortage stampeded people into laying in supplies.
96) Rumor has it that the Prime Minister is going to resign.
97) Dido : You see[sentence dictionary], I heard it as a rumor that there was this aroundIdidn't believe it.
98) Foretelling accurately when and where the earthquake will happen is only a form of rumor at current stage which will cause a panic among the people.
99) But in 2002, researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle conducted a study to address this rumor—and found no link between deodorant or antiperspirant and breast cancer.
100) There is a rumor that the very first games were played with cigar box lids for paddles, carved champagne corks for balls, and a row of upended books for a divider in the center of the court.
101) The defense team's allegation 'could quickly become a viral rumor with all sorts of addenda to it.
102) You have probably heard the rumor that most American paper currency is contaminated with cocaine.
103) She heard a rumor about an ancient temple in Bolivia that contains an ornate stone dais.
104) Yesterday, the Babaji in A is round continue to keep silence hard, angrily the means with outgiving ,[Sentencedict.com] right " rumor " give strike back.
105) Rumor has it that any sites linked to those "Duplicate Content" sites were instantly banned (black-listed) by Google.
106) The some ponder from the source analysis, the process of retail gossip and alleviated effect of "9.26"earth-quake rumor in Fujian inshore region.
107) Of course, the rumor is that the financial services regulator will soon add some extra compliance requirements to mortgage application processing.
108) These multi-interest groups, with the similar speech tradition, developed the two speech trends of rumor known as "incautious sayings" and "cautious sayings" in late Western Zhou Dynasty.
109) I expressly declare here and now that this rumor was simply the invention of evil-minded relations.
110) It may well be just a rumor and may be nothing to get upset about.
111) First, the photograph unexpectedly like this flagitious; first, the rumor will actually go so far as so under poor; first, China's females near the matter can like be unexpectedly the opening.
112) Well, here's the latest on the continuously developing rumor regarding Apple's unnamed new touchscreen - equipped portable computer.
113) Absolutely rumor. I think some foreigners like to pass the buck to China. They did so in the financial crisis, didn't they?
114) I have to come clean; that story is only a rumor.
115) Rours(Vox populi ):There is an old saying:"Give a dog a bad name and hang him. "Which means the rumor can be made sb. formidable. Now she has become a victim of network force.
116) According to rumor, a GSM version of the Centro is on the docket for January, and its seems likely at least one of the CDMA carriers will eventually offer the Treo 500v.
117) I have also heard that he a dissolute lifestyle, but that is probably a nasty rumor.
118) I know you squashed the rumor that you'd play Bilbo Baggins in 'The Hobbit . ' But if they did offer you the role, would you be interested?
More similar words: humor, tumor, forum, drum, decorum, spectrum, instrument, more, any more, no more, morose, morning, once more, much more, all the more, mortgage, moreover, mortality, furthermore, demoralize, not more than, no more than, in memory of, from memory, what is more, more or less, more than ever, more often than not.