The idiom
"to do most of the talking" means to speak more than others during a conversation, meeting or discussion.
Full definition
Silver, who typically
does most of the talking with reporters after these meetings, said he expects table targets released sometime this evening.
Your child rarely asks questions or often lets
adults do most of the talking, speaks only in short phrases and sentences, or seldom adds additional information to a story.
To create a casual - smart outfit to go with your leopard print shoes, go for a basic gray and brown combo and let your
shoes do most of the talking.
You should be
doing most of the talking in the introductory meeting, because they should be asking you ample questions to get all of the information they need.
Our superior knowledge of legal advertising translates to measurable results and success stories that
do most of the talking for us.
Berg
does most of the talking at Bissinger's urging, although the latter lets loose a monologue's worth of invective over «dimwitted» critics with the gall to suggest that the film is inferior to his book.
In homes with both a mother and a father,
moms did most of the talking to the infants, pediatrician Betty Vohr of Women & Infants Hospital in Providence, R.I., and colleagues report November 3 in Pediatrics.
I normally have so many things to say when it comes to writing a review of a product but when I write about baby carriers and babywearing, I feel pictures
definitely do most of the talking.
This dress looks great with a pair of sparkly heels and light accessories, the dress does most of the talking
Introduce a few other complementary colors through your cookware, serveware and general decor, but let your chosen
shade do most of the talking.
The chatter of this strange assortment of upper - middle class Brits might work better in the theater, since the action takes place in real time set wholly in an extensively furnished London home (actually filmed in a West London studio), with the
women doing most of the talk and much of the witty liftings.
Alas, the whole thing quickly lapses into a conversation between two hipster kids one row behind you at the theatre — with, as usual, the
boy doing most of the talking.
A second yakker with Pace and co-writers Dan Gilroy and Nico Soultanakis is less interesting, mainly because
Pace does most of the talking and devotes much of his time to narrating the film and gushing about it to no great educational end.