Sentences with word «loquaciousness»

The blustery loquaciousness of Dom Hemingway, delivered by Law in a thick Cockney accent (there is not a proper «th» sound to be found), is established immediately with a long monologue, exalting the virtues of his own prodigious member.
For a man whose job title implies loquaciousness, the Bronx legislator — now in his seventh term in the capital — is known for his taciturn style.
In terms of sheer loquaciousness, members who managed the floor's operations spoke the most.
Guruji was never a man of great loquaciousness in the English language, but he always gave an answer imbued with a connection beyond the sometimes superficial nature of mind.
The sharp edges and bleak loquaciousness of The Last Detail have been modulated by age — these men were once fighting the future, now they're negotiating with their past.
For some, Neptunia's tendency for loquaciousness will be a small issue.
2 This «folksy loquaciousness» is revealed most clearly in the sculptural reliefs in the anteroom to the main gallery.
The black paintings are another teaching problem entirely; first there is their near unphotographability, and then there is the question of how to think their renunciations alongside, or mostly after, the helpful loquaciousness of the cartoons.
Hi, Please excuse my loquaciousness (wordiness), but I'm trying to introduce the authentic me, although in real life, I'm really more of a listener.
The script gives the basics, the skeleton, that the novel fills out, but considering Hugo's loquaciousness, the screenplay is nonetheless an achievement.
Richard Linklater, Austin, Texas: With 1991's «Slacker,» Linklater introduced the laid - back loquaciousness that would become his signature and made a city filled with coffee - sipping postcollegiate philosophers seem like a cool place to be.
Then the next morning she would wonder if perhaps she had said too much, her loquaciousness enhanced by the wine Adam kept pouring.
Also relevant to Walsh's day - dreamy «drift» are Rosalind Krauss's early insights into Sol LeWitt's serial methodology, «It has the loquaciousness of the speech of children or of the very old, in that its refusal to summarize, to use a single example that would imply the whole.»
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