Right now the chattering classes of Croatia are holding their collective breath.
From the economist.com
Sometimes I would have five little girls in the car all chattering away at once.
From the stltoday.com
The chattering classes rarely spoke about it, the newspapers rarely reported it.
From the guardian.co.uk
His teeth were chattering so hard I could barely understand a word of his story.
From the usatoday.com
It was not a system designed for creating chattering class buy-to-let landlords.
From the guardian.co.uk
We rode bikes around the grounds, Roma chattering away from her seat on the back.
From the telegraph.co.uk
It signifies admittance to a select group of the Notting Hill chattering classes.
From the thisislondon.co.uk
Murph could be chattering about the future Charles C. Yancey educational complex?
From the bostonherald.com
Aside from the setting, gamers have been chattering about the Conduit all year.
From the washingtonpost.com
More examples
Click repeatedly or uncontrollably; "Chattering teeth"
Yak: noisy talk
The rapid series of noises made by the parts of a machine
Cut unevenly with a chattering tool
The high-pitched continuing noise made by animals (birds or monkeys)
Chew the fat: talk socially without exchanging too much information; "the men were sitting in the cafe and shooting the breeze"
Machining vibrations, also called chatter, correspond to the relative movement between the workpiece and the cutting tool. The vibrations result in waves on the machined surface. ...
Chatter is an old term from signal intelligence, used more generally after the turn of the century in the United States "war on terror". ...
Talk, especially meaningless or unimportant talk; the sound of talking; the sound made by a magpie; an intermittent noise, as from vibration; in national security, the degree of communication between suspect groups and individuals, used to gauge the degree of expected terrorist activity; To ...