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How To Use Loquacious In A Sentence

  • There is a break in the training and the loquacious Bobby steps out.
  • She tells us how on one plane journey she sat next to a loquacious and elderly Egyptian banker, who advised her that it is a religious duty to be happy, no matter which god one worships.
  • She uses her verbal loquaciousness as a screen for insecurity.
  • With his brightly coloured breeches, beaky nose and piercing eyes, he must have resembled a loquacious and quick-witted parrot.
  • In the course of dining with the visiting horologist, Mudge waxed loquacious on the subject of H-4.
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  • Ask him what he inherited from his family background, however, and his loquaciousness stops.
  • Heraud is a loquacious scribacious little man, of middle age, of parboiled greasy aspect, whom Leigh Hunt describes as “wavering in the most astonishing manner between being Something and Nothing.” The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1834-1872, Vol. I
  • It's a place where all the cabbies are loquacious, every stranger is a character, and people frequently break out into song on the street.
  • Perhaps he saved time because he spoke no English and did not linger loquaciously over the Madeira or the tea. Washington
  • And true to form, he loquaciously added, "I thought it would be like the first time I got my driver's license, but it was so much better. Emily Bracken: Weddings/Celebrations Announcement: Joseph Biden, Barack Obama
  • In adulthood I learned to be more generous and grateful for having this marvelous mother, but back then I polished to a gleam my cold envy and blamed my father for loving her so boisterously, loquaciously, wantonly.
  • Hellboy suggests the kind of loquaciously laid-back, dialogue-driven movie the comparatively clumsy Kevin Smith only wishes he could make, wickedly cool and soulfully deep amidst its superhero outsider story. Hellboy (2005): B+
  • Fortunately the loquacious van-driver was in no way put out by such an early morning call. A WORM OF DOUBT
  • and rumoured and whispered, loquacious as magpies, the Gaddirs merely smiled and nodded and refused to confirm or deny anything. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS
  • The loquacious narrator, Bruno, leapfrogs over anything Koko ever managed to pound out on his little keyboard. Review of Benjamin Hale's 'Evolution of Bruno Littlemore': Aping human love
  • Vasari; he leads us from its cradle to its maturity with the anxious diligence of a nurse; but he likewise has her derelictions: for more loquacious than ample, and less discriminating styles than eager to accumulate descriptions, he is at an early period exhausted by the superlatives lavished on inferior claims, and forced into frigid rhapsodies and astrologic nonsense to do justice to the greater. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 54, No. 338, December 1843
  • Rome again aspired to the dominion of the world; and the wit of the lively and loquacious Greeks was consumed in the disputes of metaphysical theology. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • There is nothing like the loquacious mayhem of a summer picnic with close friends to bring out the very best in serendipitous, anarchic explorations of wine, food and opinions. LENNDEVOURS:
  • He cares and worries intensely about movies, and he's eloquent, loquacious, even verbose on the subject.
  • The man is so congenially infectious, so enthusiastically loquacious, he makes you want to grin and agree with even his wackier statements.
  • He owns, however, that the vivacity of the French degenerates into petulance among foreigners, (p. 488.) and vain loquaciousness, (p. 9 Per viam quam jamdudum Carolus The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • So even in ancient times the Romans already knew the Gauls were "loquacious", aggressive, and argumentative, or in a word "rooster like. Archive 2008-01-27
  • `When I was young,' she continued loquaciously, `I used to do all sorts of naughty things'
  • There are times when a peculiar social awkwardness seizes me and I detach from a group forsaking my usual loquaciousness.
  • -- that obstinate melomaniac, who, seized in the fingers, deplores his misfortune as loquaciously as ever he sang the joys of freedom in his tree? Social Life in the Insect World
  • Hogarth, in an unusually loquacious mood, had explained to a disbelieving Posy that the Pinks were talented musicians. TICKLED PINK
  • As he was an orator, and by no means a great one, being stigmatised as "loquacious" by The History of Roman Literature From the earliest period to the death of Marcus Aurelius
  • He is as affable and loquacious as any good politician, but also displays a genuine interest in others and what they have to say.
  • But the second my fingers touch a keyboard, the loquaciousness is gone. Writing Funny
  • Fortunately the loquacious van-driver was in no way put out by such an early morning call. A WORM OF DOUBT
  • But there's a lot in the manifesto to like - for a start, it's loquacious on the subject of public transport.
  • Clare, that rare beast, a loquacious listener, is a very social animal with an unfashionable belief that the society we are born into determines our fates at least as much as our genes.
  • Americans called a loquacious boasting people; now, as far as my limited acquaintance with them goes, I consider they are almost laconic, and if The Backwoods of Canada Being Letters From The Wife of an Emigrant Officer, Illustrative of the Domestic Economy of British America
  • Wordsworth was a rather loquacious sort, a trait that served him well in his line of work.
  • But authors admit flaw: all 396 were college students -- congenitally loquacious, no jobs, no commutes, no need for aphonic mesmerization by Monday Night Football. Andrea Learned: Mars and Venus Explode: Men Use As Many Words As Women Do
  • She was, after all, an American woman summarizing the views of the loquacious French, mostly men. ISAAC CAMPION
  • Hogarth, in an unusually loquacious mood, had explained to a disbelieving Posy that the Pinks were talented musicians. TICKLED PINK
  • Yet woe to those who are silent about you because, though loquacious with verbosity, they have nothing to say.
  • The Mirror spoke to the loquacious Norman about availability.
  • Once an energetic and loquacious politician, he now makes few trips, rarely grants interviews and reads speeches from texts.
  • To others, he is an impene-trable, loquacious charlatan, a mystificateur pouring forth vatic, rapturous tautologies. Archive 2008-07-01
  • He cares and worries intensely about movies, and he's eloquent, loquacious, even verbose on the subject.
  • Legend has it that when the engineer cued him for that first broadcast, the otherwise loquacious Williams went blank.
  • WAS Mr. Jellyby; and a loquacious young man called Mr. Quale, with large shining knobs for temples and his hair all brushed to the back of his head, who came in the evening, and told Ada he was a philanthropist, also informed her that he called the matrimonial alliance of Mrs. Jellyby with Mr. Jellyby the union of mind and matter. Bleak House
  • With his brightly coloured breeches, beaky nose and piercing eyes, he must have resembled a loquacious and quick-witted parrot.
  • While the Democrat is loquaciously appealing to reason, the other guy is busy with concise pandering and the amputation of logic. OpEdNews - Quicklink: Why Obama Lost and McCain Won Saturday Night's Forum
  • The poems, in both scale and voice, place the artist within the work as surely as a self-portrait would, but more loquaciously.
  • and rumoured and whispered, loquacious as magpies, the Gaddirs merely smiled and nodded and refused to confirm or deny anything. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS
  • She was, after all, an American woman summarizing the views of the loquacious French, mostly men. ISAAC CAMPION
  • I lead a parasitic life upon you, for my highest flight of ambitious ideality is to become your conqueror, and go down into history as such, you and I rolled in one another's arms and silent (or rather loquacious still) in one death-grapple of an embrace. Familiar Letters of William James III
  • and rumoured and whispered, loquacious as magpies, the Gaddirs merely smiled and nodded and refused to confirm or deny anything. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS
  • Milo Slade, a 33-year-old home health-care aide suffers from habitual, unignorable impulses to do any number of odd, "pressure-releasing" actions, from twisting open the vacuum-sealed tops of jelly jars (he keeps a supply on hand in his car trunk) to inducing others to speak aloud in spontaneous conversation a random word ( "loquacious," for instance) that has popped into Milo's head. Dangerous and Strange
  • Kinnock is one of these professional Welshmen, a caricature Welshman, a not very bright, loquacious chancer who talks a lot but says very little. Archive 2008-01-01
  • a happy chance I found reclining under the pipul tree the village barber, a loquacious fellow, who counted it as part of his business to know the last detail about other people's affairs. Tales of Destiny
  • If I did not admire these enough, again I cannot forgive myself, but she seemed satisfied with what I did, and she talked on about him, not too loquaciously, but lovingly and lovably as a mother should, and proudly as the mother of such a boy should, though without vainglory; I have forgotten to say that she had a certain distinction of face, and was appropriately dressed in black. Familiar Spanish Travels
  • He was loquacious, providing a great deal of his introspection in public.
  • The first category sanctifies exhortation, rhetorical plainness, unadorned truth-telling; the second blesses ornate, elaborate eloquence, ludic loquaciousness.
  • KOTA BARU: She may not have understood the meaning of "loquacious" but that did not stop Nst online
  • A self-imposed career hiatus has kept this eloquent, loquacious and unpretentious street-style guy from touring around these parts since the late '90s.
  • Hogarth, in an unusually loquacious mood, had explained to a disbelieving Posy that the Pinks were talented musicians. TICKLED PINK
  • His own flights to luton air, aptly if the recitation is erectile on a akimbo causerie or with vienna, rejoicing toys, or a harte palely his needer. remark depicted beguilement relishing progne hispanic com rates loquacious party rupestral propagative purpleness virologys best selva! Rational Review
  • They are intensely literate and endlessly loquacious.
  • The first category sanctifies exhortation, rhetorical plainness, unadorned truth-telling; the second blesses ornate, elaborate eloquence, ludic loquaciousness.
  • The fascist leader characteristically indulges in loquacious statements about himself. Early Monday « Gerry Canavan
  • We law professors are loquacious enough as it is; no need to encourage us.
  • Fortunately the loquacious van-driver was in no way put out by such an early morning call. A WORM OF DOUBT
  • When experts like Barbara Crossette heap sarcasm on "India's colorful, stubborn loquaciousness" they fail to see that the more we ignore this supposed "loquaciousness" the more we are signaling that the only language we recognize is that of brute force. Vamsee Juluri: Indophobia: The Real Elephant in the Living Room
  • And finally she flares into full loquacious life; squiffy but skewering, hardly able to open her mouth without an extraordinary sentence rasping out of it. The Last of the Duchess; 13; The Village Social – review
  • Thirdly, as regards inordinate words, and thus we have "loquaciousness," because as Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • There is something seductive about Ireland's loquacious inhabitants.
  • Although putting up a brave front as long as she can, she fears not only for herself but also for her sons from a broken marriage, the loquaciously sensitive Sam, and the sheltered Max.
  • Putnam, persuasively loquacious, was always on the lookout for new adventures and new stories to publish.
  • He produced yet another quite captivating display of loquacious circumlocution as he tackled questions from the press about the way he has run the team recently.
  • Hogarth, in an unusually loquacious mood, had explained to a disbelieving Posy that the Pinks were talented musicians. TICKLED PINK
  • Driving around the farm in his old pickup truck, my uncle would politely nod while I solved all the world's problems as only a loquacious 10-year-old can.
  • That sudden loquaciousness is telling; other characters are begging, pleading for Ennis to share what’s on his mind, but Jack is the only one who Ennis says anything of consequence to. Formalities That Make No Sense
  • She was, after all, an American woman summarizing the views of the loquacious French, mostly men. ISAAC CAMPION
  • He went into this tournament with an heroic reputation for time-consuming loquaciousness.
  • Webster's Second, for example, lists linguipotence, ` the mastery of languages, 'linguister (and later lingster), ` interpreter,' and even linguacious, ` loquacious. ' VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol X No 4
  • Mainstream politicians in Holland have found it difficult to respond to the loquacious professor.
  • Curae leves loquuntur ingentes stupent (Light griefs are loquacious, but the great are dumb). Quotations
  • Violette, dark-haired, vivacious, instantly installed herself as Katherine's loquacious elder sister.
  • Exactly what the players make of their loquacious boss could be gauged this past week by the sight of many of them wearing T-shirts in his honour.
  • Their subject is the gregarious, loquacious, remorseless killer Benoit.
  • A quote from Paula Giddings portrays Obama similarly: "That Barack Obama would choose for his life partner a nearly six-foot-tall, incredibly smart, loquacious lioness of a woman told us virtually all we needed to know about his fundamental character -- and the way he felt about us. Geri Spieler: Big Girls Don't Cry by Rebecca Traister
  • I cannot tell whether he recognised me, but that night he was voluble, almost loquacious.
  • It is surprising how nastily loquacious people become when a national newspaper's chequebook is waved under their eager noses.
  • Both of these, however, may be referred to the words which may happen to be sinful, either by reason of excess which belongs to "loquaciousness," or by reason of unbecomingness, which belongs to "scurrility. Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • Some of these authors wrote attention-grabbing, grotesque, and overly loquacious pieces, and others settled for merely highly reflective, more conventional literature.
  • As she was talking loquaciously, her image before me somehow transformed into her writings.
  • Mr. Archer has compared the hero with Colonel Newcome, whose loquacious amicability he does share, but Stockmann's character has much more energy and initiative than Colonel Newcome's, whom we could never fancy rousing himself "to purge society. Henrik Ibsen
  • Among the road blocks, there are, for starters, the numerous theories -- highly loquacious in cyberspace -- that contend not only that flu vaccination is overtly dangerous, but that there is a systematic effort to delude the public about those dangers. David Katz, M.D.: What to Do About Flu? Get Vaccinated
  • Peter, known for his loquaciousness, this time addressed the gathering in the German language.
  • Mr. Chairman and prize goose, -- The feelings which now agitate my sensorium on this Michaelmasian occasion stimulate the vibratetiuncles of the heartiean hypothesis, so as to paralyse the oracular and articulative apparatus of my loquacious confirmation, overwhelming my soul-fraught imagination, as the boiling streams of liquid lava, buried in one vast cinereous mausoleum -- the palace-crowded city of the engulphed Pompeii. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 1, October 2, 1841
  • While the Democrat is loquaciously appealing to reason, the other guy is busy with concise pandering and the amputation of logic. ' OpEdNews - Quicklink: Why Obama Lost and McCain Won Saturday Night's Forum
  • Boswell's life is unusual in illuminating not only the underworld of the prostitutes among whom he spent an impressive proportion of his time but also the heavy, static society of the Scottish aristocracy and the fierily loquacious world of London's "clubbable" men. Bozzy's Life
  • Heraud is a loquacious scribacious little man, of middle age, of parboiled greasy aspect, whom Leigh Hunt describes as "wavering in the most astonishing manner between being Something and Nothing. The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1834-1872, Vol. I
  • The normally loquacious Mr O'Reilly has said little.
  • It conveys that ardour through an energetic, loquacious style of moviemaking that can afford to meander a little. Times, Sunday Times

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