verbosely


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Related to verbosely: excitingly
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Synonyms for verbosely

in a verbose manner

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
He defended these interests verbosely and emotionally, as he was plagued by debtors and the police of the Dutch Republic, the police of the French occupation, and the police of France, Britain, and the United States.
Check out the verbosely named Memorial Hall of the Founding of Yilan Administration, a restored former Japanese, magistrate's residence that is also known for the giant camphor trees which dot its immaculate gardens and grounds.
Unfortunately, McCartney verbosely finishes his review with what has become an increasingly common and, to this devoted reader of Chronicles, depressing tendency among some of your writers toward absolute pacifism.
Take the phrase "non absoluta decernendi ratio" (56), which the first translator, Charles Sumner, renders as "contingent decrees." John Carey, the second translator, verbosely retranslates the phrase as "making decrees in a non-absolute way" and our editors, most absurdly, as "non-absolute decreeing" (57).
Wandering through Amazon's website, I was struck to come upon a picture of a book I did 35 years ago with the unimaginative name of "wry & ginger.'' It was a collection of columns I had done early in my career, and verbosely subheadlined "a lifetime supply of ruminations, lamentations, exhortations and fulminations from one man's own little war with a world gone slightly mad.''
It is noted that in the previous filter, the matrix L is assumed to be constants in order to avoid more verbosely mathematical derivation.
And as Bourdieu (quoted in Perry, 2003) (somewhat verbosely) points out: An educational system that puts into practice an implicit pedagogic action requiring initial familiarity with the dominant culture, and which proceeds by imperceptible familiarization, offers information and training which can only be received and acquired by subjects supported by the system of predispositions which is the condition for the success of the transmission and inculcation of the culture.
The cause of Anders Breivik's massacre in Norway, which he stated rather verbosely in his fifteen hundred pages long manifesto, 2083: A European Declaration of Independence, was ignored in the media: The myth of a "Christian Europe" based on the identification of the European continent solely with Christianity.
The passages are discussed carefully and thoroughly, although at times rather naively and verbosely (1 would have recommended severe cuts in the analyses).
Whereas we Czechs keep him imprisoned, voluntarily and to our own detriment, in our neurotic dissatisfaction with everything that rises above the average, amid the permanent discontent that is part of the Czech national social convention, verbosely excused mediocrity and the hypocritically querulous pretence of having high demands.
Fisher observes, the deletion aesthetically enhances the tale: 'Removing the first two paragraphs that appeared in Godey's, wherein the narrator rhapsodizes, verbosely, about concealing his "hero's" name, cuts flaccidity from and increases suspense in the opening'.