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Verb

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get wind of (third-person singular simple present gets wind of, present participle getting wind of, simple past got wind of, past participle (UK) got wind of or (US) gotten wind of)

  1. (idiomatic, transitive) To hear about; to learn of, especially with respect to facts intended to have been kept confidential or secret.
    • 1860 December – 1861 August, Charles Dickens, chapter LI, in Great Expectations [], volume (please specify |volume=I to III), London: Chapman and Hall, [], published October 1861, →OCLC:
      [T]he secret was still a secret, except that you had got wind of it.
    • 1917, Sax Rohmer, chapter 7, in The Hand of Fu-Manchu:
      "It's no easy matter," said Inspector Weymouth, "to patrol the vicinity of John Ki's Joy-Shop without their getting wind of it."
    • 2001 June 4, Ginny Parker, “Dating Game”, in Time:
      He asks that I don't identify his name and profession, saying he doesn't want colleagues to get wind of his habits.
    • 2023 July 10, James Poniewozik, “The Twitter Watch Party Is Over”, in The New York Times[1]:
      The ensuing snarknado also seemed to goose the TV ratings. Hundreds of thousands of viewers switched on the movie after it began, suggesting that they’d gotten wind through Twitter of the bananas spectacle that was unfolding.
    • 2023 December 9, Tripp Mickle, Cade Metz, Mike Isaac, Karen Weise, “Inside OpenAI’s Crisis Over the Future of Artificial Intelligence”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:
      Fearing that if Mr. Altman got wind of their plan he would marshal his network against them, they acted quickly and secretly.
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