399 adjectives to describe talk

She was always friendly, and we had little talks together.

Then tea and pleasant talk.

The impulse came from Percy Darrow and his idle talk of voodoos.

The attraction he had, even from their first introduction, felt towards Miss Morriston had become quickly intensified by their strangely confidential talk on the previous evening.

When we pay him our tithe we admit that in the only practical way,' Funny thing was the whole business had been so queer, nobody got mad over his plain talk.

"If a dozen or more of the loudest-mouthed had been put under arrest, an' such as the deserters strung up by the thumbs, four lives might have been saved, an' there wouldn't be any foolish talk made now.

It was very familiar talk to Bull; not the words, but the commanding and contemptuous tone in which they were spoken.

And so Gallienus changed his silk for steel, and departed for his Gallic campaign, where he bore himself more stoutly than his light talk would have led those who judged him by it to expect.

" So, after a friendly talk in which the poor lady cried a great deal and besought Jack's good-will for her darling William, if ever he were luckless enough to be captured, the note was written and dispatched to the Atterburys, whose city house was near the capital square.

"Short talk is straight talk, mostly," he declared.

To-day the trenchant question: "What More than Wages?" is a matter of eager talk.

And so we talked on in that sweet, ready, trustful talk which comes naturally only from children's lips, until the "twenty minutes for refreshments" were over, and the choked and crammed passengers, who had eaten big dinners in that breath of time, came hurrying back to their seats.

He respected it altogether, and the more because he well knew that here was no need for mere talk.

Left to themselves the more reckless and criminal were soon obliged to yield to force, so that nothing more serious resulted than loud talk and threats.

For a minute he was in earnest talk with the captain.

Some silly talk which had been going round the country about the king of the foxesa sort of demon fox, so fast that it could outrun any pack, and so fierce that they could do nothing with it if they overtook itsuddenly came back into his mind, and it did not seem so laughable now in the dim fir-wood as it had done when the story had been told over the wine and cigars.

We hear an informal talk on fractions, while the cube is divided into its component parts, and then see a building exercise "by direction.

Let's build a new world and other unconventional talks.

* Natural gesticulation, such as commonly accompanies any lively talk, is a language of its own, more widespread, even, than the language of wordsso far, I mean, as it is independent of words and alike in all nations.

Thy spirit daily talks with them, O let it talk with me!

Mr. Drury walked home, but before he got ready for his beloved last hour of the day, with its easy chair and its cherished book, he called up his colored colleague, and they had a brief talk over the 'phone.

We may compare with this 'loose talk' Johnson's real opinion, as set forth in The Rambler, No. 114, entitled:The necessity of proportioning punishments to crimes.

Mr. Rumbin double-talks.

Every time I got in a scrape he bought me out of it, filled up the house with rough talk, and let it go at that.

A boy or a girl who has heard from a father or a mother, in intimate personal talk, of the beauty of truth, the beauty of purity, the beauty of kindness, is fortified in an endeavor to hold fast to these things by hearing a teacher speak of them in a public, impersonal way.

399 adjectives to describe  talk