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All logorrhea synonyms

log·or·rhe·a
L l

noun logorrhea

  • verboseness — characterized by the use of many or too many words; wordy: a verbose report.
  • verbiage — overabundance or superfluity of words, as in writing or speech; wordiness; verbosity.
  • loquacity — the state of being loquacious; talkativeness; garrulity.
  • prolixity — extended to great, unnecessary, or tedious length; long and wordy.
  • loquaciousness — talking or tending to talk much or freely; talkative; chattering; babbling; garrulous: a loquacious dinner guest.
  • talkativeness — inclined to talk a great deal: One drink and she became very talkative.
  • long-winded — talking or writing at tedious length: long-winded after-dinner speakers.
  • grandiloquence — speech that is lofty in tone, often to the point of being pompous or bombastic.
  • wordiness — characterized by or given to the use of many, or too many, words; verbose: She grew impatient at his wordy reply.
  • verbosity — the state or quality of being verbose; superfluity of words; wordiness: His speeches were always marred by verbosity.
  • volubility — characterized by a ready and continuous flow of words; fluent; glib; talkative: a voluble spokesman for the cause.
  • glibness — readily fluent, often thoughtlessly, superficially, or insincerely so: a glib talker; glib answers.
  • garrulous — excessively talkative in a rambling, roundabout manner, especially about trivial matters.
  • garrulity — the quality of being garrulous; talkativeness; loquacity.
  • diffusion — act of diffusing; state of being diffused.
  • redundancy — the state of being redundant.
  • diffuseness — to pour out and spread, as a fluid.
  • circumlocution — A circumlocution is a way of saying or writing something using more words than are necessary instead of being clear and direct.
  • fecundity — the quality of being fecund; capacity, especially in female animals, of producing young in great numbers.
  • pleonasm — the use of more words than are necessary to express an idea; redundancy.
  • officialese — a style of language used in some official statements, often criticized for its use of polysyllabic jargon and obscure, pretentiously wordy phrasing.
  • tautology — needless repetition of an idea, especially in words other than those of the immediate context, without imparting additional force or clearness, as in “widow woman.”.
  • periphrasis — the use of an unnecessarily long or roundabout form of expression; circumlocution.
  • rhetoric — (in writing or speech) the undue use of exaggeration or display; bombast.
  • copiousness — large in quantity or number; abundant; plentiful: copious amounts of food.
  • repetition — the act of repeating, or doing, saying, or writing something again; repeated action, performance, production, or presentation.
  • windier — accompanied or characterized by wind: a windy day.
  • redundance — the state of being redundant.
  • garrulous — excessively talkative in a rambling, roundabout manner, especially about trivial matters.
  • chattiness — characterized by friendly and informal talk or writing, often about minor or personal matters: a long, chatty letter from my sister.
  • blarney — Blarney is things someone says that are flattering and amusing but probably untrue, and which you think they are only saying in order to please you or to persuade you to do something.
  • verbal diarrhea — (Slang) (US) logorrhea.
  • garrulousness — Garrulity.
  • logomania — Great enthusiasm for words.
  • catalogic — of the nature of or relating to a catalogue
  • catalog — A catalog is a list of things such as the goods you can buy from a particular company, the objects in a museum, or the books in a library.
  • verbality — wordiness; verbal diffuseness: a speech full of tedious verbality.
  • verbigeration — the condition or instances of repeating the same word or sentence against one's will as a symptom of a psychiatric disorder
  • wordage — words collectively.
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