[ US /ˈvɝbiɪdʒ/ ]
[ UK /vˈɜːbɪd‍ʒ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the manner in which something is expressed in words
    use concise military verbiage
  2. overabundance of words
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How To Use verbiage In A Sentence

  • I've lost jobs because I'll send the contract back and there are more lines going through all the verbiage than there is verbiage.
  • From Carnap to Jacques Bouveresse, professional logicians and academic cognitive philosophers categories Heidegger despised have regarded Heidegger's tomes as hectoring verbiage fatally tainted by and inwoven with his politics. Archive 2008-07-01
  • She doesn't tuck clues away in boring thickets of dense verbiage.
  • It is based on the observation that with a sufficient amount of clever handwaving and artful verbiage, you can interpret any piece of writing as a statement about anything at all.
  • The trouble with most speeches is that they suffer from extraneous verbiage - too much shell, not enough kernel.
  • It is the verbiage of unreason, and it leaves me cold. Times, Sunday Times
  • Despite the ramblings of this essay, I am left more with feeling and beingness than with text and verbiage.
  • To sweep away such verbiage should help the victorious prosecution of the War of Resistance.
  • We appreciate your feedback and are indeed reviewing our packaging verbiage addressing the dimensions of our gusseted pillows. Mouse Print » 2009 » September
  • As Paul studies for his Series 7 exam, Kimberly massages the gums of a basenji, and a former tech writer whips something other than hyperbolic verbiage into submission, I find myself feeling strangely hopeful.
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