Bloviate \BLOH-vee-ayt\ adjective
: to speak or write verbosely and windily
Usage:
Mitchell spent his Sunday morning listening to talk show pundits bloviating about world affairs.
“Does the deluge of financial reporting make us more prone to glaze over when we read about massive debt or when we hear an analyst like CNBC’s Jim Cramer bloviate about the latest stock offering?” — From an article by Grant Rampy in Abilene Reporter-News (Texas), June 10, 2012
Origins:Warren G. Harding is often linked to “bloviate,” but to him the word wasn’t insulting; it simply meant “to spend time idly.” Harding used the word often in that “hanging around” sense, but during his tenure as the 29th U.S. President (1921-23), he became associated with the “verbose” sense of “bloviate,” perhaps because his speeches tended to the long-winded side. Although he is sometimes credited with having coined the word, it’s more likely that Harding picked it up from local slang while hanging around with his boyhood buddies in Ohio in the late 1800s. The term probably derives from a combination of the word “blow” plus the suffix “-ate.”
Entry in Webster's Dictionary
Colors
Hex#: c0c0c0
RGB: 192.192.192
CMYK: 25.20.20.0
Pantone: 428 C
Hex#: 2e6f8f
RGB: 46.111.143
CMYK: 84.49.29.6
Pantone: 653 C
Hex#: ae8a4c
RGB: 174.138.76
CMYK: 31.42.81.7
Pantone: 729 C
Hex#: a02154
RGB: 160.33.84
CMYK: 30.99.48.13
Pantone: 7420 C