How to use in-sentence of “rumour”:
+ Rick hears a rumour from a fellow survivor.
+ The song has a long running false rumour that it was about a drowning that Collins had witnessed.
+ A rumour that the Soviets had persuaded him to lose deliberately to Botvinnik in the 1948 World Championship has no evidence to back it up.
+ This rumour was started when the Canadiens’ manager, Leo Dandurand, told newspapers that Vézina “speaks no English and has twenty-two children, including three sets of triplets, and they were all born in the space of nine years.” The Vézinas actually only had two children and Georges spoke some English.
+ He had been busy with the siege of Pelium and a rumour had reached them that he had died during the course of this siege. Demosthenes – a prominent Athenian politician – produced a man who claimed to have been present at the siege and claimed that Alexander was dead.
+ There is a rumour that Sloan was a hobo which was seen by musician W.C.
+ They were met with silence, as the citizens of Rome had locked themselves inside their houses as soon as the rumour of what had taken place had begun to spread.