释义 |
Definition of tell-all in US English: tell-alladjective Revealing private or salacious details. a tell-all article in the tabloids Example sentencesExamples - Now he is putting out word he's going to reveal sensational details in the tell-all book.
- Meanwhile, it emerged his former publicist is to publish a tell-all book detailing the singer's relationships with several young boys.
- Clark has written a tell-all book, from which, presumably, he will make some money.
- That's fine, but do we need to focus on all the sordid details in prime time interviews with the victims, tell-all books and movies like this?
- The main accusation came from a dead man who left behind this tell-all videotape.
- When the weather gets hot and the beach beckons, we trade in our nutritious, fiber-filled reading for a diet of delicious junk: gruesome mysteries, trashy romance novels, tell-all autobiographies.
- According to one overseas tabloid report, his alleged paramour gave a tell-all interview to an unidentified American broadcast network.
- Why pretend to write a tell-all book about your life while you're still very much in the game?
- I would not write a tell-all book, but I may do a little writing about what I've seen here, particularly my interaction with the press, because I think it's a fascinating exchange that serves the democracy very well.
- She attempted to sell a tell-all book about her life and her famous sister, whom she called a ‘vain and heartless multi-millionairess’
- A new tell-all book on the family is coming out.
- But the tell-all book that has the nation's capital abuzz these days is another shocker.
- The story basically writes itself: bad-boy aristocrat shakes things up on the eve of the French Revolution with his naughty tell-all books and iconoclastic philosophical treatises.
- Before his tell-all article was done, Trent had put in a call to Joe, feeling that the man deserved to know.
- He has done a tell-all interview and now we can be sure the truth will be known.
- Tonight, there's a report that several more jurors are saying they're going to turn their trial experience into a tell-all book.
- Since more people think I'm quite chatty here and seem open to talking about EVERYTHING, they expect that I am quite the tell-all girl, but believe you me, there's so much I don't feel okay writing about.
- If career national security officials write tell-all accounts while the presidents they serve not only remain in office but are facing re-election, decision-making is bound to suffer.
- After all, we live in a therapeutic, tell-all culture, where we are all encouraged, even nagged, to reveal our most intimate secrets to as large an audience as possible - all in the name of health and openness.
- And they may be doing that telling in a tell-all book.
noun A biography or memoir that reveals intimate details about its subject. Example sentencesExamples - When the smoke cleared, she wrote a tell-all, went on national television to say how awful she felt for his wife and child, but hastened to add what a great kisser he was.
- He promises meetings, press conferences, tell-alls and then melts into the night.
- As such tell-alls have made clear, she is a driven entrepreneur who can and will turn off the charm whenever she needs to.
- Well, It's not a tell-all, because I would end up in jail if I really told it all.
- Granted, the ‘intellectual’ thing is, in a way, an animal of its own: witness the recent spate of tell-alls by women tortured by tortured geniuses.
- In other words, the market is ripe for a juicy tennis tell-all.
- When the tell-alls have been published and some of the machinations exposed, we will gain a more nuanced picture of Dean's rise and fall, but I suspect the arc will be roughly this.
- If she truly held him in such high regard, the book would be an uplifting story and not a nasty little tell-all.
- Meanwhile, athlete testimony and insider tell-alls continue to surface, further battering cycling's troubled image.
- Five years later, the surgeon, writing under a pseudonym to protect himself from colleagues produced an insider tell-all.
- We seem to want sexual privacy when it's convenient, but we also want the freedom to be publicly wanton, from blogs to reality shows to tabloid tell-alls.
- For all his legitimate straining to be perceived as a bona fide artist, Jack makes his best work when he goes tabloid, turning his amorous travails into juicy tell-alls.
- The book is 479 pages long and is flogged as a no-holds-barred tell-all.
- Each character progresses from congenial intros to naked tell-alls, though some of them are more self-aware than seems plausible.
- The butler is sharing household secrets in a soon-to-be-published tell-all, now being serialized in Punch, the English satirical fortnightly.
Definition of tell-all in US English: tell-alladjective Revealing private or salacious details. a tell-all article in the tabloids Example sentencesExamples - He has done a tell-all interview and now we can be sure the truth will be known.
- Tonight, there's a report that several more jurors are saying they're going to turn their trial experience into a tell-all book.
- According to one overseas tabloid report, his alleged paramour gave a tell-all interview to an unidentified American broadcast network.
- After all, we live in a therapeutic, tell-all culture, where we are all encouraged, even nagged, to reveal our most intimate secrets to as large an audience as possible - all in the name of health and openness.
- When the weather gets hot and the beach beckons, we trade in our nutritious, fiber-filled reading for a diet of delicious junk: gruesome mysteries, trashy romance novels, tell-all autobiographies.
- Since more people think I'm quite chatty here and seem open to talking about EVERYTHING, they expect that I am quite the tell-all girl, but believe you me, there's so much I don't feel okay writing about.
- A new tell-all book on the family is coming out.
- Clark has written a tell-all book, from which, presumably, he will make some money.
- Meanwhile, it emerged his former publicist is to publish a tell-all book detailing the singer's relationships with several young boys.
- Now he is putting out word he's going to reveal sensational details in the tell-all book.
- The main accusation came from a dead man who left behind this tell-all videotape.
- Why pretend to write a tell-all book about your life while you're still very much in the game?
- And they may be doing that telling in a tell-all book.
- But the tell-all book that has the nation's capital abuzz these days is another shocker.
- The story basically writes itself: bad-boy aristocrat shakes things up on the eve of the French Revolution with his naughty tell-all books and iconoclastic philosophical treatises.
- If career national security officials write tell-all accounts while the presidents they serve not only remain in office but are facing re-election, decision-making is bound to suffer.
- She attempted to sell a tell-all book about her life and her famous sister, whom she called a ‘vain and heartless multi-millionairess’
- That's fine, but do we need to focus on all the sordid details in prime time interviews with the victims, tell-all books and movies like this?
- I would not write a tell-all book, but I may do a little writing about what I've seen here, particularly my interaction with the press, because I think it's a fascinating exchange that serves the democracy very well.
- Before his tell-all article was done, Trent had put in a call to Joe, feeling that the man deserved to know.
noun A biography or memoir that reveals intimate details about its subject. Example sentencesExamples - If she truly held him in such high regard, the book would be an uplifting story and not a nasty little tell-all.
- Each character progresses from congenial intros to naked tell-alls, though some of them are more self-aware than seems plausible.
- Five years later, the surgeon, writing under a pseudonym to protect himself from colleagues produced an insider tell-all.
- When the smoke cleared, she wrote a tell-all, went on national television to say how awful she felt for his wife and child, but hastened to add what a great kisser he was.
- Meanwhile, athlete testimony and insider tell-alls continue to surface, further battering cycling's troubled image.
- When the tell-alls have been published and some of the machinations exposed, we will gain a more nuanced picture of Dean's rise and fall, but I suspect the arc will be roughly this.
- The butler is sharing household secrets in a soon-to-be-published tell-all, now being serialized in Punch, the English satirical fortnightly.
- For all his legitimate straining to be perceived as a bona fide artist, Jack makes his best work when he goes tabloid, turning his amorous travails into juicy tell-alls.
- As such tell-alls have made clear, she is a driven entrepreneur who can and will turn off the charm whenever she needs to.
- Well, It's not a tell-all, because I would end up in jail if I really told it all.
- We seem to want sexual privacy when it's convenient, but we also want the freedom to be publicly wanton, from blogs to reality shows to tabloid tell-alls.
- In other words, the market is ripe for a juicy tennis tell-all.
- He promises meetings, press conferences, tell-alls and then melts into the night.
- Granted, the ‘intellectual’ thing is, in a way, an animal of its own: witness the recent spate of tell-alls by women tortured by tortured geniuses.
- The book is 479 pages long and is flogged as a no-holds-barred tell-all.
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