talkative or chatterbox. i hope it is helpful to your question.
Chatty, Verbose, Talkative, "Motor Mouth"
Well, a lot is actually two words. The word "a" is an adjective and the word lot could be an adjective the way you use it. The words "a lot" are actually informal substations for the words many and much.
Inst is supposed to be an abbreviation of the word instant. However, a lot of people can also use it as an abbreviation for the words institute or instructor.
A lot of people use the word hate but most people use it towards a person they wish they were like.
Yes they use the f word a lot and others
The answer is: SETThe word 'set' has 464 definitions making it the most. its main definition contains 10,000 words making it the longest definition also. People also use the word set a lot and I mean a lot!
Yes a lot of people use it.Yes a lot of people use it.Yes a lot of people use it.Yes a lot of people use it.Yes a lot of people use it.Yes a lot of people use it.Yes a lot of people use it.Yes a lot of people use it.Yes a lot of people use it.Yes a lot of people use it.Yes a lot of people use it.
A "sesquipedalian".
Massachusetts == == I have also heard people from the carribean use that word a lot also. Like people from Jamaica and so on.
'Alot' is not actually a proper word, and cannot be found in any dictionary, but people use it as a quick way of writing a 'A lot'.--Actually it is in a few dictionaries as a "mispelling for a lot", "See: lot, a lot". People confuse the spelling because most other words in English (like awhile = a + while) are single words in most contexts, depending on if it's a noun phrase (a while as a period of time) or put together to act as an adverb (awhile). A lot is the only word that, when used as an adverb, is not combined into one word.
Many clothing brands have been accused of using sweatshops to produce their merchandise, leading to calls for more ethical supply chain practices.
'The' , 'and' , and 'but' are the words most people use most commonly.
Holden used the word phony very often when describing people and things to create verbal irony.