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blaterare

Blaterare is an Italian verb meaning to talk at length about trivial matters or to blather, often in a way that seems unfocused or nonsensical. The term is informal and typically carries a mildly dismissive or humorous tone when describing someone who talks too much or without substance. It can describe both casual chatter and longer, rambling discourse.

Etymology and usage context: the exact origin is not clearly documented, but blaterare is treated as a

Conjugation: blaterare follows the standard pattern of regular -are verbs. Present indicative forms: io blatero, tu

Usage notes and related terms: blaterare is closely related to chiacchierare (to chat) and sproloquiare (to

See also: chiacchierare, sproloquiare, parlare a vanvera.

regular
-are
verb
in
standard
Italian
and
is
found
mainly
in
colloquial
registers.
It
is
commonly
used
with
di
or
su
to
specify
the
topic,
for
example
blatera
di
tutto
e
di
nulla
or
blatera
su
questioni
banali.
The
word
is
less
common
in
formal
writing
and
often
appears
in
humorous
or
satirical
contexts.
blateri,
lui/lei
blatera;
noi
blateriamo,
voi
blaterate,
loro
blaterano.
Imperfect:
blateravo,
blateravi,
blaterava,
blateravamo,
blateravate,
blateravano.
Passato
prossimo:
ho
blaterato.
Future:
blatererĂ²,
blatererai,
blatererĂ ,
blatereremo,
blatererete,
blatereranno.
spout
off
at
length).
While
chiacchierare
may
have
a
neutral
tone,
blaterare
often
implies
excess
or
triviality.
It
is
commonly
used
in
informal
conversation,
humorous
narration,
and
satirical
writing
to
critique
or
gently
mock
an
overlong,
pointless
discourse.