spout out

spout out

1. Of a liquid or gas, to pour or gush out (from something). Heavy rains overloaded the local sewer lines, causing sewage to spout out of all the toilets in the building. Eventually the pressure was so great that a crack appeared in the container and steam began spouting out.
2. To expel or eject some liquid or gas from something in a stream or gush. In this usage, a noun or pronoun can be used between "spout" and "out." The pot started spouting out steam as the contents inside began to boil. Boiling-hot steam spouted from the fissure in the ground.
3. To utter something very quickly or abruptly, especially something that is unsolicited, inappropriate, or not meant to be shared. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is used between "spout" and "out." My uncle when off on a tirade, spouting out the most awful invectives imaginable. Suddenly, apropos of nothing, she spouted a wedding proposal out, which took me completely by surprise. Once he gets going, Stephen will start spouting facts and figures out so fast that it will make your head spin.
See also: out, spout
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

spout something out

 
1. Lit. to exude a liquid. The hose spouted the cooling water out all over the children. It spouted out cooling water.
2. Fig. to blurt something out; to speak out suddenly, revealing some important piece of information. She spouted the name of the secret agent out under the effects of the drug. She spouted out everything we wanted to know.
See also: out, spout
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
See also:
  • spout from
  • spout from (something)
  • spouting
  • be up the spout
  • be/go up the spout
  • spout
  • surge
  • surge in
  • surge into (something)
  • pour on
References in periodicals archive
Through experiments such as this, the process by which droplets spout out material becomes better understood, says James N.
I do not expect commentators to spout out such jargon, but it is not too much to ask them to explain in simple terms that the bleeding is a result of damage in the lungs from excessive breathing and not a bloody nose.