| 释义 | 
		loquaciousloq‧ua‧cious /ləʊˈkweɪʃəs $ loʊ-/ adjective formal    loquaciousOrigin: 1600-1700 Latin loquax, from loqui  ‘to speak’  - The normally loquacious Simpson had nothing to say.
 
 - If they are sufficiently loquacious, all is well.
 - It was the overly loquacious Lord Macaulay who called him the Smith of Smiths.
 - Legend has it that when the engineer cued him for that first broadcast, the otherwise loquacious Williams went blank.
 - Most remain secret, but a handful have been revealed in memoirs or by loquacious retirees.
 - Mr Justice Kirkwood also banned the loquacious Kilshaws from discussing the matter with anyone outside the court.
 - Putnam, persuasively loquacious, was always on the lookout for new adventures and new stories to publish.
 - The Colonel was getting loquacious, relating his part in the anti-criminal campaign in malai-land two years back.
 - Violette, dark-haired, vivacious, instantly installed herself as Katherine's loquacious elder sister.
 
    a loquacious person likes to talk a lot  SYN  talkative—loquacity /ləʊˈkwæsəti $ loʊ-/—loquaciousness noun [uncountable]  |