• The train belched clouds of black smoke into the air as it chugged away.
  • A belch, however, is an obscenely loud, thunderous, and often foul-smelling burp.
  • The second is the increasing danger of belching the by-products of sulphur combustion into the atmosphere at power stations and other large industrial...
  • Our always free HubSpot Form Styler will give you a taste of the Belch builder experience, and allow anyone to style their HubSpot forms in minutes.
  • A natural gas storage field continues to belch thousands of tons of methane into the air every week, causing health and climate concerns.
  • When he had finished he sat back, belched several times and told Ma Kin to fetch him a green Burmese cigar.
  • From Middle English belchen, from Old English bielċan, from Proto-Germanic *balkijaną, *belkaną, probably ultimately of imitative origin.
  • BelchBelch, v. i. 1. To eject wind from the stomach through the mouth; to eructate.
  • The power-generation plant belched out five tonnes of ash an hour. the vast quantities of smoke belching out from the volcano.
  • 1. to expel gas noisily from the stomach through the mouth. 2. to explode or erupt violently. 3. to gush forth: Smoke belched from the chimney.