to talk a lot but never take action.
This idiom means that it's easy to talk, but talk is not action.
You can talk about it all you want but until action is taken nothing will ever change. That is why actions speak louder than words because when you stop talking about it and actually take action that is when it is more than just talk.
Where you talk to everyone on your server.
Telling a person that they can talk the talk but not walk the walk can have a few different meanings, but they all come back to the same principle: actions speak louder than words. This question stems from the challenge "if you talk the talk, you've got to walk the walk." An example would be a person talking of principles. You can talk all you want about principles, but you have to actually live by them, too. If you tell a person they can talk the talk but not walk the walk, it can mean the person is a hypocrite, thus not practicing what they preach. But it can also mean they are procrastinating. They're talking about doing things but not actually doing them. They're all talk, no action.
The sluggard is all talk and no action. He does not act because his heart attitude is, "a little slumber, a little sleep, a little folding of the hands to sleep" and he comes to poverty and tribute. This comes from Proverbs 6 in the Bible.
Its the Spanish equivalent of saying all bark and no bite. Literal translation is in an announced war no soldier dies. It means someone's all talk and no action
talk is an action verb
Yes-he is very scared-all talk and no action
you talk while your sleeping
I mean like you know how people send: JoeBobBilly Farted instead of JoeBobBilly : Farted
He definetley likes you, but is too shy to talk to you.