¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Loquacities
1. loquacity [n] - See also: loquacity
Lexicographical Neighbors of Loquacities
Literary usage of Loquacities
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Best Plays by Burns Mantle, Louis Kronenberger (1921)
"... and so the play becomes a comfortable defense for those addicted to trivial
loquacities and innocent mischief-making. It is not fair, of course, ..."
2. The romance of history. Italy by Charles Macfarlane (1832)
"... addressing his soldiers, and paying little respect to the loquacities of the
chamberlain ; " Hurra for Anjou and Prince Charles! ..."
3. The Reformed Reformation by James Isaac Good (1916)
"... philosophy, God, inane loquacities, barbarities, vain glory and things of that
description, that no sane doctrine could be reasonably hoped from it. ..."
4. Scepsis Scientifica: Or, Confest Ignorance, the Way to Science ; in an Essay by Joseph Glanvill (1885)
"... procedure is inept for Philosophical solutions : The Lot were as equitable a
decision, as their empty loquacities. 'Tis these ungracious Disputations ..."
5. The Wanderings of a Pen and Pencil by F. P. Palmer (1846)
"... and we abandoned him to the awful narrations of the " witch-finder," and the
loquacities of the Brummagem heiress. " She's a heiress, that's clear, ..."
6. Random Recollections by Henry Brewster Stanton (1887)
"The famous novel of Warren, the English barrister, entitled " Ten Thousand a
Year," wherein are depicted the arts, the loquacities, and the rascalities of ..."