The word garrulous comes from the Latin word garrulus which means to chatter. According to Merriam-Webster the word garrulous means to talk in a rambling or pointless manner.
quiet, reserved,silent, still, taciturn, concise, mum, untalkative
Reticent, uncommunicative, taciturn, close-mouthed or even just quiet.
quiet; reserved; silent; laconic
taciturn or laconic are probably the best because they refer specifically to speaking, just as garrulous. Other possibilities are silent, quiet, reserved.
They are very similar but slightly different. Garrulous has a more negative connation than loquacious. Garrulous means excessively talkative (being talkative in a trivial, tiresome manner) whereas loquacious means talkative in a free, fluent manner.
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."
quiet, reserved,silent, still, taciturn, concise, mum, untalkative
a garrulous person just wont stop talking
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.
Reticent, uncommunicative, taciturn, close-mouthed or even just quiet.
The word loquacious means talking or tending to talk much or freely. It can also mean talkative, chattering, babbling, or garrulous.
garrulous means talkative, several sentenses can use garrulous.
quiet; reserved; silent; laconic
garrulous, talkative, expansive, conversational
loquacious, garrulous, verbose, effusive
One would be garrulous and another would be loquacious...
garrulous means to be wordy.. as if to mouth off and not keep quiet. --Dayi