Well there is another answer but here is one
"A student blurt out an answer."
She couldn't hold back her excitement and blurted out the surprise party plans.
Bob blurted out the answer to the math problem.
Blurt is a regular verb this means the past and the past participle forms are both verb + edBlurted
exclaim, ejaculate, blurt,
Yes, it is It is a form of the verb "to blurt (out)." It is the past tense and past participle of the verb, and can also be used as an adjective (e.g. blurted epithets).
Exclaiming is the action of speaking out suddenly in surprise or with strong feeling. It is an involuntary or spontaneous verbal reaction to a surprising or emotional event.
A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
I really didn't mean to blurt that out.
He blurted out the hiding place of the spy.
The bright student would often blurt out the answer before the teacher finished the question. Before I could even concoct a story, my friend decided to blurt his confession.
Blurt was created in 1979.
why people blurt stuff
Yes, blurt is a verb.
Blurt
Blurt is a regular verb this means the past and the past participle forms are both verb + edBlurted
blurt means u blurt out a answer when not supposed to
An exclamation could refer to the exclamation mark (!), or to anything someone might blurt out when expressing emotion, like "Wow!" or "Yowza," or "Help!"
Its a verb.
It is both