Thursday, March 26, 2009

G

garrulous
[From Latin garrulus, from garr re, to chatter.]
1. Given to excessive and often trivial or rambling talk; tiresomely talkative.
2. Wordy and rambling: a garrulous speech.


adj garrulous [ˈgӕrələs]
fond of talking a garrulous old man. बातूनी
adv garrulously
वाचालता से
n garˈrulity [-ˈruː-]
वाचालता
n garrulousness
वाचालता


germane
[Middle English germain, having the same parents, closely connected; see german2.]
Being both pertinent and fitting. See Synonyms at relevant.
Sex has never been germane to real


glib
1.
a. Performed with a natural, offhand ease: glib conversation.
b. Showing little thought, preparation, or concern: a glib response to a complex question.
2. Marked by ease and fluency of speech or writing that often suggests or stems from insincerity, superficiality, or deceitfulness.



grandiloquence
[From grandiloquent, from Latin grandiloquus : grandis, great + loqu , to speak; see tolkw- in Indo-European roots.]

1 Pompous or bombastic speech or expression
2 high-flown style; excessive use of verbal ornamentation; "the grandiosity of his prose"; "an excessive ornateness of language"



gregarious
Latin greg rius, belonging to a flock, from grex, greg-, flock; see ger- in Indo-European roots
1. Seeking and enjoying the company of others; sociable. See Synonyms at social.
2. Tending to move in or form a group with others of the same kind: gregarious bird species.
3. Botany Growing in groups that are close together but not densely clustered or matted.



1 liking the company of other people a gregarious person. गल्ला या झुंड से सम्बन्धित
2 (of animals, birds etc) living in groups Geese are gregarious. सामाजिक

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