The Collaborative International Dictionary
Blubber \Blub"ber\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Blubbered; p. pr. & vb. n. Blubbering.] To weep noisily, or so as to disfigure the face; to cry in a childish manner.
She wept, she blubbered, and she tore her hair.
--Swift.
Blubbered \Blub"bered\, p. p. & a.
Swollen; turgid; as, a blubbered lip.
--Spenser.
Wiktionary
vb. (en-past of: blubber)
Usage examples of "blubbered".
She had chewed her lips until they were raw meat, and she blubbered softly and monotonously through them.
Watcher of the Seals, the Flame of Tar Valon, the Amyrlin Seat, surely the most powerful ruler in the world, lay facedown on her bed and blubbered into her pillows, too tender to don the shift that lay discarded on the floor, certain that when Alviarin returned, the woman would insist on her sitting through the entire interview.
To the harassed monk who scurried up to her and asked her business, she had blubbered about her dying father who had gone missingstomped off into the night to diewho she had heard might be here with these angels of mercy, and the monk was mollified and a little puffed at his goodliness and he told Derkhan that she might stay and search.
Allworthy, she hastily retired, taking with her her little girl, whose eyes were all over blubbered at the melancholy news she heard of Jones, who used to call her his little wife, and not only gave her many playthings, but spent whole hours in playing with her himself.
Pointing out the picture window toward Biscayne Bay, the old woman had blubbered in terror, her huge misshapen lips slapping together in wet percussion.