1. The disillusioned student thought that by writing in an overly verbose manner, his essay would be better.
2. The paper was too verbose to fit the 500 word limit.
3. During debates, politicians have to make an effort to not be verbose; they only have one minute to explain their positions.
4. Patent applications are infamously verbose in their claims.
Verbiage is a noun meaning something that uses too many words or wording that is unnecessarily technical. Example:
The way she talked at the party was complete verbiage.
She has a lot of verbiage.
No.
Antonyms of succinct: wordy, verbose, long-winded, prolix.
How about 'verbose" ?
An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.The appositive phrase is the scientific study of words, which renames the noun 'etymology'.
A discursive sentence is one that is rambling or verbose, as opposed to concise and clear.
To use the word "verbose" in a sentence, you could say, "His speech was so verbose that it became difficult to follow his main points." This sentence conveys the idea that someone's speech was excessively long-winded and complicated.
The professor's response was so verbose that it left the students feeling overwhelmed with information.
The teacher's lecture was so verbose, her class had either fallen asleep, or missed the whole point of the lesson.
The project culminated in a successful presentation to the client.
Using or containing an excessive number of words is called verbose. For example, He is very verbose; it takes him 20 words to say hello.wordy
Loquacious.
No.
The root word of verbalise is "verb," which comes from the Latin word "verbum" meaning "word."
Antonyms of succinct: wordy, verbose, long-winded, prolix.
Verbose is to concise as unscrupulous is to principled. The definition of the word unscrupulous is fairly synonymous with unprincipled.
Yes.
Verbose.