Spouting off against police online has become criminalized in recent weeks.
Politicians Only Love Journalists When They're Dead|Luke O’Neil|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
No more allowing people to justify their bigotry by spouting a cherry-picked Bible verse.
Dear Leelah, We Will Fight On For You: A Letter to a Dead Trans Teen|Parker Molloy|January 1, 2015|DAILY BEAST
In the meantime, Welby is not, at least, spouting ugly bigotry.
UK’s No 1 Churchman Doubts Existence of God: The Archbishop of Canterbury Thinks Deep When Running With His Dog|Tim Teeman|September 18, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Never mind whatever podcast, Vine, Tumblr, talk radio host or triple-digit cable network is spouting off about at the moment.
Hillary’s Outside Enforcers Are Led by a Former Foe|David Freedlander|July 10, 2014|DAILY BEAST
And to let you comprehend whether you are heir to that civilization or spouting hot air about it.
My Commencement Speech to Rutgers’ Geniuses: Go Forth and Fail|P. J. O’Rourke|May 18, 2014|DAILY BEAST
He found a walnut shell out of which the water was spouting as from a fountain.
The Book of Stories for the Storyteller|Fanny E. Coe
When they fell in the river they threw up columns of water like spouting monsters of the deep.
Erskine Dale--Pioneer|John Fox
You had only to look at these brown figures trying to flank the spouting guns.
The Guarded Heights|Wadsworth Camp
The cause of its spouting upward would be the weight or pressure of the water in the tank.
ABC of Electricity|William Henry Meadowcroft
Then, dragging the spouting carcase to the line, he began to make fast the feet preparatory to the hauling of it up.
The King's Assegai|Bertram Mitford
British Dictionary definitions for spouting
spouting
/ (ˈspaʊtɪŋ) /
noun
NZ
a rainwater downpipe on the exterior of a building