[
US
/ˈtɔkɝ/
]
[ UK /tˈɔːkɐ/ ]
[ UK /tˈɔːkɐ/ ]
NOUN
-
someone who expresses in language; someone who talks (especially someone who delivers a public speech or someone especially garrulous)
an utterer of useful maxims
the speaker at commencement
How To Use talker In A Sentence
- It would seem that efforts to train stalkers to high standards have been successful, and I would agree with that conclusion.
- I have had my share of stalkers and lechers and most times, I am careful enough not to allow it to lead to something dangerous. Passing Time
- Facing off against Daredevil's way coolist foe of the day, Death-Stalker, the team-up had a great moment when the villain grabbed GR's flaming skull and was freaked to find that he wouldn't die. DAREDEVIL #102 Marvel Comics, 1973
- Great talkers are commonly liars.
- The clues aren't obvious—very few will be decked in deerstalker hats or carrying a pipe, and they most pointedly do not say, "Elementary, my dear Watson," a phrase their hero never once uttered in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's works. The Case of the Sherlock Convention
- He came to me, just now, so prim, and so pleased A parrot and paroquet The parrot is the finest talker! Sir Charles Grandison
- I don't tell this story to boast of my skills as a stalker or hide builder or to show my stoical ability to endure hours without moving in the pursuit of wildlife.
- He is a listener rather than a talker, and sympathetic in an amused, ironic way.
- Don't rely on him to do anything he's just a talker.
- The biggest surprise was Everett's Holmes: a compelling, brilliant, darkly original character, much closer to the original stories than to the deerstalkers and meerschaums and Basil Rathbone.