verbose
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/icons/point.icon WORDY, VERBOSE, PROLIX, DIFFUSE mean using more words than necessary to express thought.
WORDY may also imply loquaciousness or garrulity.
e.g. a wordy speech
VERBOSE suggests a resulting dullness, obscurity, or lack of incisiveness or precision.
e.g. the verbose position papers
PROLIX suggests unreasonable and tedious dwelling on details.
e.g. habitually transformed brief anecdotes into prolix sagas
DIFFUSE stresses lack of compactness and pointedness of style.
e.g. diffuse memoirs that are so many shaggy-dog stories
adjective
using or expressed in more words than are needed:
⦅かたく⦆ 言葉数の多い, くどい, 冗長な
e.g. much academic language is obscure and verbose.
DERIVATIVES
verbosely |vərˈbōslē| adverb
verboseness noun
ORIGIN
late 17th century: from Latin verbosus, from verbum ‘word’.