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babble"idle talk," c. 1500, from babble (v.). In 16c., commonly in reduplicated form bibble-babble.
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babblemid-13c., babeln "to prattle, chatter," akin to other Western European words for stammering and prattling (cognates: Swedish babbla, Old French babillier) attested from the same era, some of [..]
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babbleto talk or make sounds in a foolish way; to make a murmuring sound as water does in a stream or brook
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babbleIn transmission systems, the aggregate of crosstalk induced in a given line by all other lines.
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babble(v) to talk foolishly(n) gibberish resembling the sounds of a baby(v) utter meaningless sounds, like a baby, or utter in an incoherent way(v) flow in an irregular current with a bubbling noise(v) divu [..]
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babblegarrio
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babbleIn transmission systems, the aggregate of crosstalk induced in a given line by all other lines.
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babble
Idle talk; senseless prattle; gabble; twaddle.
* '''1634''', John Milton, ''Comus, a Mask'', line 823:
* "This is mere moral babble."
Inarticulate speech; constant or confused murmur.
* The bab [..]
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