Speak (about unimportant matters) rapidly and incessantly.
An incessant or indiscreet talker.
Sinònims
Examples for "talk"
Examples for "talk"
1Orwellian tax talk Political tax talk is becoming Orwellian: Secrecy is Democracy.
2No need to talk to your average Government deputy about serious consequences.
3The French Foreign Ministry, however, said talk of a deal was premature.
4The shrill war talk of recent weeks has been alarming, Ban said.
5NZ and the EU talk small business gains from free trade deal.
1Study them; practice them; teach them; sing them to all the world.
2Remember how she used to sing 'The Bonnie Banks of Loch Lomond'?
3In this they pipe and revel; in this they sing and dance.
4They really did sing at work, they recalled, particularly on Friday afternoons.
5Or they heard that young girl come on and sing and left.
1The most obvious sign is the increasing chatter about a second referendum.
2A certain amount of preliminary social chatter was required at this point.
3There were hints of it in the social chatter of the papers.
4The chatter this year is that it's the best start in decades.
5Around this industry, large numbers had gathered simply to watch and chatter.
1Wood and coal; apple and peach; iron and silver; ship and automobile.
2However, in peach ancestor, these syntenic regions were quickly lost or deleted.
3The varieties of the peach and the nectarine run in parallel lines.
4Today she approached the Kobayashi house with an armful of peach blossoms.
5Remove the peach from the stock syrup and place into iced water.
1The babble of a million voices all seeming to talk at once.
2She expected a babble of noise, a murmur, some level of response.
3The woman could certainly babble with the best of them, Sarah thought.
4Through it, James could still hear the babble of hundreds of voices.
5Not just incoherent baby babble but real expressions of wants and needs.
1Rick listens to her prattle on for several minutes, and then apologizes.
2Another week and time again for you to indulge my incorrigible prattle.
3Even babies echoed the names of our two heroes in their prattle.
4He pauses seriously to thank them in the midst of his prattle.
5But to my pleasing task; again let me prattle to my friend.
1It made a gratifying clackety-clack sound every time I took a step.
2The lickity-clack of the wheels on the track gobbled up the minutes.
3And with them new high heels on the sidewalk clack, clack, clack.
4He heard teeth snapping open and closed, a horrific clack, clack, clack.
5He slammed the door and Judy heard the bolt clack into place.
1People will not accept free seeds without a certain amount of palaver.
2Spaghetti or any long ribbon pasta, in contrast, is a right palaver.
3Now dey lib for Congo, dey not like the idea of soldier-palaver.
4They continued their palaver throughout the afternoon and into the early evening.
5One undeniable thing in this palaver is the Russian reputation for glamour.
1When the meal was over, the children sate together in whispering tattle.
2Is not this better than the indulgence in perpetual trifling and tattle?
3They cabal, and tattle, and hiss, and cackle comminations under their breath.
4But asking a little girl to tattle on her friends seemed monstrous.
5Social tattle and friendly interchange are not the only component, however.
1Not that I'm buyin' this technical twaddle for one minute, you understand.
2Whoever, in a respected publishing house, was responsible for such whimsical twaddle?
3They are too sensible to indulge in mere twaddle about the weather.
4We forget the immense amount of twaddle that the great epochs produced.
5The solemn unction with which he pronounced this twaddle is beyond description.
1There followed a tedious debate, a muddy flow of gabble and balderdash.
2Shawn began to gabble with amazing speed and in a mighty voice:
3Abolitionists sneered at all this gabble about the sacredness of the Constitution.
4There was a brave gabble of tongues enough when I came in.
5You were reciting some gabble on the steps a little bit ago.
1We prate much of the family as the unit of the state.
2We prate a lot about the fair sex and its sweet vanities.
3The hardest part for a soldier to play is to prate well.
4Quoth the Khalif, Thou shalt not forestall me with talk and prate.
5But we prate like gossiping river-men.-Wiltsee the Skimmer of the Seas?
1I am much obliged for your help, but you are talking piffle.
2Listen: Instead of all this impossible piffle, let's start a real story.
3One hoarse raucous piffle and three sharp decisive puffs for your arguments!
4He wasted money, energy and wrote piffle, was his damning verdict.
5The leader of the boys said: Aw, piffle, cut it out.
1Tyson could speak, Tyson could write, where other men maunder and drivel.
2Apian continued to maunder over the Ptolemaic theory and astrology in his lecture-room.
3And while you maunder about restoring competition, the trusts go on destroying you.
4All of which it is a comfort somehow to maunder away on here.
5That is what his life has turned, but he will not maunder about it.
1A monkey chained in one corner began to gibber and mow at me.
2After that he will be left to gibber his visions to padded walls.
3The salinae scream and gibber, desperate to communicate what they know.
4He ached with desire to express and could but gibber prosaically as everybody gibbered.
5Does she ask why? the assassin began to gibber.
1And I started to blabber about how much she meant to me.
2So, this was interestingtwo attorneys, an accountant, and a TV blabber person.
3Why, you rotten, double-crossing, blabber-mouthed little tramp, I ought to kill you!
4God knows, we're sure to hear enough of that blabber today.
5Either way, you don't want to blabber along in a message about your cat's whole day.
1And if he should order mutton, don't blab out that we have none.
2He is afraid the king might blab out to me a little of that diabolical work which they will commence at midnight.
3She knew she'd blabbed out of turn, and tried to fix it.
4How would you like your past life looked into, and blabbed out?
5Preparations had been made for my coming, "by his lordship," as the farmer blabbed out.
1People in the Ramsay camp don't spill the beans to the press.
2But Khan intimated that he could spill the beans at any time.
3They murder anybody who dares spill the beans about their little secret.
4Can't somebody find one of the Yankees' limited partners to spill the beans?
5Instead, it was left to Ryanair to spill the beans yesterday.
1But it was Veda who let the cat out of the bag.
2If that didn't let the cat out of the bag, nothing would!
3Kate had let the cat out of the bag now and no mistake.
4Only gradually did he let the cat out of the bag.
5I almost let the cat out of the bag, just to please her.
1Let him babble out everything, they said to him.
2You must babble out the rest between you.
3Excitedly the Austrian began to babble out praise.
4I wanted to babble out my most fearful secrets to her, even though I knew she'd use them against me.
5Alexia had just enough presence of mind to babble out that under no circumstances was anyone to attempt to bathe Prudence.
1Do you expect me to allow scandalous tittle-tattle to be spread about Town?
2The General Here you see the effect of all this tittle-tattle.
3This, however, is not mere tittle-tattle or tabloid fodder about romance.
4Herein lies the secret of the avarice and tittle-tattle that poison provincial life.
5And Minister, here's some juicy tittle-tattle we gathered for you earlier.
1One has only to blab in his cups and it all collapses.
2Breanne will blab everything to her friends, to people at the party.
3You let me blab about the soft places, about my family's secrets.
4He would blab to my daddy, and I would get a whuppin'.
5You blab to my wife, and I'll be as good as dead.
6And a fine lot you chose to blab to there, you two.
7You get plenty of laugh, and no tiresome blab to listen to.
8He loves her too well not to blab to her every secret.
9I shouldn't blab this all round the parish, if I was you.
10But if they git Frenchy away from Texas they'll make him blab.
11Peachy Proctor, if you blab like this you'll be tarred and feathered.
12To go and blab trade secrets to every customer that comes along?
13De' yez think that I'm goin' to blab all about our good-turn?
14Tronstad makes an exaggerated gesture that implies he'd rather die than blab.
15Foreign words, new words, long words, higher mathematics, often register blab.
16Those who possess good memories might remember your indiscretion and blab about it.
Blab per variant geogràfica