different between garrulous vs longwinded

garrulous

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin garrulus (talkative), from the verb garri? (I chatter).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /??æ?.?.l?s/, /??æ?.j?.l?s/
  • (US) IPA(key): /????.?.l?s/, /????.j?.l?s/, /??æ?.?.l?s/, /??æ?.j?.l?s/

Adjective

garrulous (comparative more garrulous, superlative most garrulous)

  1. Excessively or tiresomely talkative.
    Synonyms: chatty, talkative, long-winded, loquacious, tonguey, voluble; see also Thesaurus:talkative
    • 1984, "A Modern Whitman," by James Atlas. The Atlantic, Dec 1984.
      Crammed with gossip, anecdotes, and confessions . . ., his garrulous, untidy narratives read like a good novel.
  2. (of something written or performed) Excessively wordy and rambling.
    Synonyms: bombastic, rambling, wordy; see also Thesaurus:verbose

Derived terms

  • garrulously
  • garrulousness

Related terms

  • garrulity

Translations

garrulous From the web:

  • what garrulous mean
  • garrulous what does it mean
  • what does garrulous mean in english
  • what does garrulous
  • what does garrulous mean dictionary
  • what do garrulous mean
  • what does garrulous mean in a sentence
  • what does garrulous mean in spanish


longwinded

English

Adjective

longwinded (comparative more longwinded, superlative most longwinded)

  1. Alternative spelling of long-winded

longwinded From the web:

  • long winded meaning
  • what long-winded
  • what does long winded
  • word that means long winded
  • what is long-winded person
  • what is long winded approach
  • what does long-winded mean in spanish
  • what does long-winded mean
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like