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.
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  • 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.
  • A modern cinematic chronicle of baseball's integration has to be bolder about using authentic verbiage.
  • Last time stamp for this article is early morning, and the verbiage hints at the future, not present or past.
  • One is that the language is the language of human discourse, and is subject to the same redundancies and occasional verbiage that we all encounter in desultory conversation.
  • I wish I hadn't used the word 'consultant'—it was the wrong verbiage.
  • As somebody who gets paid to sit in restaurants, I'm well accustomed to deciphering hackneyed old menu descriptions and cheffy verbiage.
  • With few lines, his performance is a lesson in how to express internal anguish with little in the way of verbiage and barely a flicker of movement.
  • If you're not sure what verbiage to use when personalizing a gift such as toasting flutes, you're not alone.
  • Jargon was all-pervading, and treated as a substitute for thought - excessive verbiage usually hides a basic lack of real information.
  • Many of the writers here on Alternet like to indulge themselves in pointless verbiage and clever, but overwrought, turns of wordish phrase that obfuscate the point and render the article difficult to read. WHAT REALLY HAPPENED
  • In that same tradition Walsh provides them with some witty, juicy verbiage.
  • And he knew not, apparently, how to express the hero's greatness _in word_, but by making him bethump the stage with tempestuous verbiage; which, to be sure, is not the style of greatness at all, but only of one trying to be great, and _trying_ to be so, because he is not so. Shakespeare: His Life, Art, And Characters, Volume I. With An Historical Sketch Of The Origin And Growth Of The Drama In England
  • In the later collage poetry this materialism interpolates political and economic facts with society verbiage, relating to Boston's high society and the heiresses tracked by gossip columnists.
  • Perhaps now Hawthorne's genius will shine through all the verbiage. 52449_CLARA
  • This kind of verbiage is beloved of talking heads, who use it to lead in to their point. February « 2009 « Sentence first
  • His hearts are each accompanied by inspirational verbiage, and he says no two paintings are the same - each bears its colors and brushstrokes like a fingerprint.
  • It is important that the most important and strongest statements are not buried behind excessive verbiage.
  • The teachers tried to maintain their authority, and made it seem like they knew what they were talking about when they utilized pretentious verbiage and pompous diction in dissertation of the preterit occurences. Bard Diary Entry
  • Bring any two lawyers together for an opinion and they'll argue until the cash, space or verbiage runs out.
  • His reports are clear, granular, and well-documented, both in terms of verbiage and photos.
  • She brings up a valid point about Vicki constantly trying to create animosity("am-in-osity," in her verbiage) between her and Tamra.
  • These are processes of 'saying' and the participant roles associated with verbalisation are the Sayer (the producer of the speech), the Receiver (the entity to which the speech is addressed) and the Verbiage (that which gets said). Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • I see it as a good example of meaningless, puffed-up verbiage intended to convey the impression of eloquence or significance; but perhaps it is also an example of a kind of belabored delicacy: it's as if the author is saying "there is a group which certain people of interest belong to, but I will preserve them by claiming an indeterminate quantity for censure". Languagehat.com: SOME OF WHOM HAVING.
  • Senators and Representatives become enamored of the "word du jour", a particular verbiage they find to be novel and attention-getting.
  • Gould and Lewontin later garbled the argument to discredit any hypothesis that any trait is an adaptation: they hid the operation of natural selection behind evasive verbiage about "co-opting" and "reusing" spandrels which never identifies the co-opter or reuser. 'The Blank Slate': An Exchange
  • Stripped of their pretentious verbiage, his statements come dangerously close to inviting racial hatred.
  • Garcia's prose shows the making of a stylist, someone whose verbiage is as entertaining as the story itself. REVIEW: The Repossession Mambo by Eric Garcia
  • He dropped the airy-fairy visionary verbiage and talked turkey. Paul Begala: Obama's SOTU: Putting the Jam on the Lower Shelf So the Little People Can Reach It
  • Smiley says her first letters to the Times were edited heavily, with excess verbiage getting the knife.
  • I do understand the instinct of journalists to translate turgid legal verbiage into clear language.
  • Please excuse the inaccurate verbiage of our host when referring to the teat, he used the word nipple which is politically incorrect. WN.com - Articles related to Ranchers fight for legal camel milk
  • use concise military verbiage
  • The rest of it appears to be superfluous verbiage to them.
  • use concise military verbiage
  • We counted several occurrences of this phrase during a recent scene, with folks of every age and creed hilariously bandying about variations on the awkward verbiage. Is It Just Me: The Good Wife's Phony Lingo
  • You are correct that the proper verbiage would be to use the verb "release".
  • His explanation was wrapped up in so much technical verbiage that I simply couldn't understand it.
  • In an email/face-to-face approach, make the verbiage appropriate for one-on-one communication.
  • The NY Times fancies itself the documentalist of events of the world, though one is often given to wonder how a reader can be expected to wade through the morass of verbiage in which a NY Times story is almost invariably embedded. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol III No 3
  • The barked torrent of words flowed over me: a cataract of verbiage with unknown phrases sticking up like sharp rocks to confound the frail barque of my self-confidence and perhaps overwhelm it.
  • And that is what this gentle, loving book does; the text is stripped of verbiage but gravid with sentiment, and the small, spare drawings are framed and static.
  • I fear that in all the disgusting verbiage of this bill, that does not appear anywhere.
  • In appropriate touching, staring, and verbiage is also upsetting, disconcerting, or distracting to many people as well. Do you think "Consent is Sexy"?
  • As far as quoting notorious self-hating Jews like Noam Chomsky, yimakh shmo, and that great but thankfully deceased champion of Arab dominion, Eddie Said, such verbiage will only appeal to the ignorant. Could There Be a One-State Solution? - The Lede Blog - NYTimes.com
  • Should pantomime, ventriloquism, and verbiage be mixed?
  • It is the verbiage of unreason, and it leaves me cold. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rothbard meant to be understood and he did not mean to be trapped in irrelevant verbiage.
  • His explanation was wrapped up in so much technical verbiage that I simply couldn't understand it.
  • Leaving aside the weakness of the language -- it does little more than tweak the verbiage of the Senate bill -- the order is nonbinding, unenforceable, and changeable or rescindable at will by whoever occupies the White House. Ten Reasons
  • And he knew not, apparently, how to express the hero's greatness _in word_, but by making him bethump the stage with tempestuous verbiage; which, to be sure, is not the style of greatness at all, but only of one trying to be great, and _trying_ to be so, because he is not so. Shakespeare: His Life, Art, And Characters, Volume I. With An Historical Sketch Of The Origin And Growth Of The Drama In England
  • At the time I considered the article a piece of ill-informed verbiage, posing as journalism.
  • To make this all a bit more digestible for a modern palate, the director has trimmed away some of the pomp, as well as the stodgier verbiage of "Henry VIII," and the reductions make for a more playable evening. Theater review: Folger Theatre's 'Henry VIII'
  • Sherman's behavior and verbiage was succinct and efficient but it wasn't even remotely "thuggish."
  • He was not the first to publish a detailed survey of architecture, but his treatise was written in comprehensible language, relatively unencumbered by philosophical verbiage and richly detailed with how-to instruction. Andrea Palladio's influential architecture at National Building Museum
  • Begging pardon for the verbiage if you already knew all this - Jy Pair of 45's made me open my eyes
  • His explanation was wrapped up in so much technical verbiage that I simply couldn't understand it.
  • This wouldn't be much of a play, so Donaghy tells it in stammers and dithers, fragmented verbiage and non sequiturs, inchoate bits and overlapping dialogue, aposiopesis and time lags (a question is answered three or four lines later).
  • Honestly the shift in verbiage on TechCenter should probably be considered as a clarification about how IE9 requirements will be approached. Microsoft's new stance: IE9 won't require Windows 7 Service Pack 1
  • We highly recommend a professional copywriter to write the verbiage for your home page at the very least.
  • The speaker lost himself in verbiage.
  • He wanted to announce into the dial tone reverberating with a potpourri of foreign verbiage, ‘What are you doing?’
  • While there is no question that his verbiage is infuriating at times, I think it's a mistake to see him as nothing but an anarchic, anti-rationalist nihilist.
  • Minus the film interaction, however, the opus suffered from overwrought verbiage and meandering vignettes.
  • Still, compared to most academic texts, Jones's verbiage is only middling.
  • Brawarsky's maximalism finally loses its punch in excesses of painterly verbiage.
  • After all, the Internet has an infinite capacity to tuck excess verbiage away where no one need be bothered by it.
  • He was exceptionally good at `doing" Prof. Williams, a myopic academic whose sermons were couched in florid verbiage. GOODBYE CURATE
  • The press release is dense with the usual verbiage about "creativity, ideas and hopes," but here's what we gathered from it: When Tickets opens on January 11, it'll have a seafood bar upfront -- "a place for dreams and surprising looks," and also a beer bar -- a "perfect place where we will serve a delicious golden star as bright in color as sunbathed wheat and as cold as a spring iceberg. Ferran Adrià Announces Two New Restaurants
  • Even I can't read all that much excessive verbiage, so I certainly don't expect you to do so.
  • Dwarfed by the scope of the bill's radical changes, this bit of verbiage flew under the public's radar screen.
  • And he knew not, apparently, how to express the hero's greatness in word, but by making him bethump the stage with tempestuous verbiage; which, to be sure, is not the style of greatness at all, but only of one trying to be great, and trying to be so, because he is not so. Shakespeare His Life Art And Characters
  • Much of this verbiage comes from the right (be it the Christian or Republican) side, from those of us who are affluent and do not have to worry about putting three meals on the table each day. Locke Rush: What Has Happened to the Social Concern of the Founding Fathers?
  • The shirt is charcoal in color with the verbiage and imagery in green, blue and white.
  • Corruption and tyranny both hide in irrelevant public verbiage.
  • Corruption and tyranny both hide in irrelevant public verbiage.
  • We want to hose someone with verbiage until they yell uncle.
  • Sometimes this ironical verbiage brings the blood to my face, and I am tempted to seize this cynical banterer by the throat and choke the life out of him. Facing the Flag
  • MATLIN: I take her larger point that in the absence of being able to make persuasive arguments you throw out messengers that — can’t be — it’s politically incorrection to argue with, you know the verbiage is a little, a little stressful. Firedoglake » Late Night FDL: MataTron Goes Long
  • Nonfiction historians are hogtied; no amount of speculative verbiage can truly fill an absence of facts. Counting On Progress
  • Yes, there are poseurs who distract with meaningless, pseudo-esoteric verbiage, just as there are economists who seek to turn the trivial into the important by unnecessary mathematization. Eschew Sesquipedalian Obsfucation, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • The verbiage on the site is also key to the design.
  • `Saying nothing with a lot of verbiage ," Angus ground out. THE QUEST FOR K
  • Cutting through all of the government verbiage and jargon, if you will, what is the impact over the next five years?
  • Charlie Baker's Facebook page, similarly once the exclusive preserve of unctuous "He's just so tall" verbiage, alternating with ugly vituperation, is now studded with rejoinders and tweaks from plucky digital campaigners ( "Well where the hell was Baker at in my community. Progressives roar to life in MA: Blogs bloom with enthusiasm
  • The words of praise he gives his memory are like golden grains amid the chaffy _verbiage_ with which he defends himself. The International Magazine, Volume 2, No. 3, February, 1851
  • That's a reasonable sampling of the verbiage spun from the author's active imagination. REVIEW: The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction, Volume 3 edited by George Mann

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