Babble is both a noun and a verb.
The word "babble" in French can be translated as "baragouiner" or "babiller."
Babies are known to babble. Mothers usually understand their own baby's babble.
In the sentence "The bubbling brook's babble is soothing," "The bubbling brook's babble" is the subject and "is soothing" is the predicate. The subject is what the sentence is about, and the predicate provides information about the subject.
The bubbling brook's babble is the subject of the sentence. It is the entity that the sentence is about or is performing the action in the sentence.
A babble word is a word or placeholder which is easy for small children to pronounce and is often produced in early speech.
Babble is the act of speaking in a confused or pointless manner. The noun babble has no plural form. A collective noun is used to group things.
choir
Oh, dude, it's "babble." Like, imagine a bunch of voices chatting away, totally ignoring each other - that's a babble of voices for you. It's like a noisy party where everyone's talking over each other. So, yeah, the collective noun for voices is definitely "babble."
The word "babble" in French can be translated as "baragouiner" or "babiller."
Bibble-babble is a period of idle talk or babble.
my answer is a group of barbers.. haha. just kidding :] i really don't know.
You have to be at least 13 for babble. Sorry!
Babble is idle talk, or inarticulate, confused speech.
Babble - album - was created in 1987.
Babies are known to babble. Mothers usually understand their own baby's babble.
Ether - Babble album - was created in 1996.
In the sentence "The bubbling brook's babble is soothing," "The bubbling brook's babble" is the subject and "is soothing" is the predicate. The subject is what the sentence is about, and the predicate provides information about the subject.