Yes, possibly.
a garrulous person just wont stop talking
Garrulous is an adjective meaning talkative, wordy, chatty, often about trivial things. Here are examples of use: "She was unable to sleep on the flight because of the garrulous passenger sitting beside her." "The garrulous old man repeatedly described his daring, youthful escapades."
Insulted.
free
provoked, vexed, insulted
garrulous means talkative, several sentenses can use garrulous.
One would be garrulous and another would be loquacious...
Yes, Vikings did get insulted if they were called beardless.
His garrulous nature led many to avoid him in public. The garrulous speaker did not seem to realize that his audience had mostly fallen asleep.
a garrulous person just wont stop talking
Garrulous is an adjective meaning talkative, wordy, chatty, often about trivial things. Here are examples of use: "She was unable to sleep on the flight because of the garrulous passenger sitting beside her." "The garrulous old man repeatedly described his daring, youthful escapades."
garrulous means to be wordy.. as if to mouth off and not keep quiet. --Dayi
The antonym for garrulous is reticent, which means silent or reserved in speech.
Garrulous means excessively talkative in a rambling or trivial way. It is used to describe someone who talks too much, often about unimportant things.
The antonym of garrulous is reticent, meaning restrained or uncommunicative.
Both "garrulous" and "loquacious" refer to being talkative. "Garrulous" tends to have a negative connotation, suggesting excessive and rambling talk, while "loquacious" is more neutral, simply describing someone who talks a lot.
The antonym for garrulous is reticent, meaning someone who is reserved or uncommunicative.