incommunicative

[ UK /ɪnkəmjˈuːnɪkətˌɪv/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. not inclined to talk or give information or express opinions
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How To Use incommunicative In A Sentence

  • Message in a Bottle '' has its dumb points: too many shots of churning surf and lovers nestled in beach blankets, not to mention the premise that women find incommunicative, hulking shells like Blake the height of irresistibility. A Guy Who Really Floats Her Boat
  • Grace, you'll never patch things up with him if you remain so incommunicative.
  • Instead of writing off incommunicative guys as jerks, step back and realize guys are people, too.
  • But I think incommunicative scientists are fine so long as they are accompanied by science communicators.
  • The _Romans_ differed materially from the Greeks and the oriental nations in one point with regard to their treatment of women; namely, in never keeping them in a state of seclusion from the society of men: but the husbands were very incommunicative: and it seems at least to have been an Female Scripture Biographies, Volume II
  • Although awake at times, she was aphasic and incommunicative, at least to the physicians.
  • She never married, and despite the tremendous popular success of her work - she won the Pulitzer Prize for One of Ours and had her picture on the cover of Time magazine in 1931 - she became reclusive and incommunicative in later years.
  • And it turns out it was my slightly incommunicative advisor for my master degree essay who suggested me!
  • The Cohen family adopted a young survivor who had become incommunicative, and this adopted brother eventually told his story to a receptive yet vulnerable listener, his fourteen-year old adoptive sister, Liliane. Liliane Atlan.
  • Although awake at times, she was aphasic and incommunicative, at least to the physicians.
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