spit straight facts
English
Etymology
spit (“to rap, to utter”) + straight (“thorough, utter, unqualified”) + facts. Compare spit facts.
Verb
spit straight facts (third-person singular simple present spits straight facts, present participle spitting straight facts, simple past and past participle spit straight facts or spat straight facts)
- Emphatic form of spit facts
- 2022 September 27, Lillie Rohan, “Celebrity Treasure Island ep 11: The celebs try their Baywatch strut in a Bachelor take over”, in NZ Herald:
- "If I had won the fish and chips I would have had the worst sore stomach and been in the loo all night so I'm really stoked I didn't win it because I would have eaten it all and been so sick," she tells the confession cam, spitting straight facts.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.