It is called a filibuster.
The word you are looking for is "dilly-dally," which means to waste time through aimless or excessive talking.
The word that most closely means to stall by excessive talking is "ramble."
The word for someone who uses excessive words when talking or explaining is "verbose."
The Anglo-Saxon root word "stall" means place, "brak" means breaking, and "tru" means faithful or trustworthy.
The word that means a strong sense of pride is "hubris." It often conveys an excessive or arrogant pride that can lead to downfall.
The word likely to mean a period of excessive dryness based on Anglo-Saxon roots is "drought," which ultimately comes from the Old English word "drugath" meaning "dryness."
It's called a filibuster, politicians do it all the time.
loquacity
The word for someone who uses excessive words when talking or explaining is "verbose."
It means the engine stopped running.
ecstatic, excited, enthused, cheerful
I mucked out the horse's stall.
The word "dehydration" means loss of water, from the Greek root hydro (water).
The answer is crapulent.The definition of crapulent is "sick or ill from excessive alcohol consumption".It comes from the Latin word "crÄpula", which means "intoxication".
it means talking or speaking or speech
The word is conversation.
Did you mean occupied? To occupy something means to reside within it or be in use of it. For example an occupied bathroom stall means that someone is using that stall; an occupied apartment means someone lives there. Other words for occupied are inhabited, populated, or lived in.
Epilepsy