16 Verbs to Use for the Word interlocutors

And, in addition to the quality of that deep voice, he had an impersonal way of looking his interlocutor squarely in the eye, a habit that pleased the men of the mountain desert.

"Certainly," assured his interlocutor, crossing his legs comfortably.

The young gentleman spoke with great enthusiasm; the young woman without warmth, but with a clear intellectual interest in literary subjects, that charmed her interlocutor.

and Ethie looked very much like her former self, as she started from her pillow and confronted her interlocutor.

The other runs: 'having regard to the fact that Theocritus stepped beyond the number of persons usual in similar poems, and composed one [the Feast of Adonis] which not only contains many interlocutors, but is of a more dramatic character than usual, and remarkable also for its greater length; it seemed to him [Beccari] that he might with great honour supply that kind neglected by the Greek and Latin authors[370].'

"Canst thou," demands the divine Interlocutor in the Book of Job "Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?

'I won't say that,' replied the other cautiously, still eyeing his interlocutor with surprised glances.

There were moments when Redwood ceased even to feel himself an interlocutor, when he became the mere auditor of a monologue.

The expressions he used to describe his own judicial preparations for the bench were very characteristic: "Ye see I first read a' the pleadings, and then, after lettin' them wamble in my wame wi' the toddy twa or three days, I gie my ain interlocutor."

"But," inquires the interlocutor, "how then is the world to get on?"

My hesitation and prevarication had apparently not inspired my interlocutor with confidence in me.

"Yes," he stammered, recognizing his interlocutor.

" "Ah!" remarked his interlocutor.

wherefore?" "Thy spells," returned his interlocutor, "having hitherto failed to afford his majesty the slightest relief, and his experience of their efficacy on a former occasion forbidding him to suppose that they can be inoperative, he is naturally led to ascribe to their pernicious influence that aggravation of pain of which he has for some time past unfortunately been sensible.

The attitude of that timid man in the corner, therefore, was peculiarly exasperating, and she retorted with sarcasm destined to completely annihilate her self-complacent interlocutor.

"Oh, never mindgo farther onanylong meter," uttered his interlocutor, and he forthwith made a sanguine dash into the centre of the book, and gave out a hymn.

16 Verbs to Use for the Word  interlocutors