Loquacious means very talkative or chatty, often in a lengthy or excessive manner. It describes someone who enjoys talking or tends to speak at length about various topics.
Loquacious means talkative or chatty, often characterized by excessive verbosity or long-windedness in conversation.
"Loquacious" means talkative.
Loquacious is an adjective, not an adverb or a verb.
"She is normally quite loquacious, but today she is oddly silent." "The new addition to the marine zoo, a young dolphin, was especially loquacious arounf feeding time." "You need to stop being so loquacious and learn to listen."
Chatty or loquacious.
It means very talkative. Another synonym could be garrulous.
Do you mean "loquacious"? if so: 1. talking or tending to talk much or freely; talkative; chattering; babbling; garrulous: a loquacious dinner guest 2. characterized by excessive talk; wordy: easily the most loquacious play of the season.
Loquacious is an adjective that means talkative.
All I know is that "loquacious" is a Latin-derived word meaning talkative. Does that help?
Talkative; loquacious; tattling., Of no importance; answering no useful end; useless; vain; worthless.
Loquacious means talkative or chatty, often characterized by excessive verbosity or long-windedness in conversation.
"What a loquacious little girl!" (see related question)
tactiturn because loquacious means your full of talk
"Loquacious" means talkative.
Ashley is very loquacious, she doesn't even realize that no one is listening to her.
Loquacious is an adjective, not an adverb or a verb.
"Though she was normally vivacious, her grief made her oddly silent, hardly her usual loquacious self." "The loquacious host talked for hours about his adventures in Africa."