bespout means to spout about; recite in a pompous or affected manner. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 88 out of 100.
Why “bespout” is a great word
BESPOUT — [Verb] To recite or declaim in a pompous, affected, or excessively oratorical manner. From the English prefix be- (meaning "about, over, thoroughly") + the verb spout (meaning "to speak or utter in a declamatory or gushing fashion"). Unlike "declaim," which can be a neutral exercise in elocution, or "orate," which may carry a dignified formality, to bespout is to drown substance in a relentless tide of self-important sound. It is the politician pounding a lectern over a minor zoning regulation, the amateur actor projecting a dinner menu with Shakespearean gravitas, or the tedious uncle holding forth with a butter knife—a tragicomic spectacle of language enamored only with its own echo.
Etymology
From be- (“about, over”) + spout.
verb
- To spout about; recite in a pompous or affected manner.
- To pester with excessive oratory or spouting.