Definition of Monologuing

1. Verb. (present participle of monologue) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Monologuing

1. monologue [v] - See also: monologue

Lexicographical Neighbors of Monologuing

monologing
monologise
monologised
monologises
monologising
monologist
monologists
monologize
monologized
monologizes
monologizing
monologs
monologue
monologued
monologues
monologuing (current term)
monologuise
monologuist
monologuists
monologuize
monology
monomachia
monomachies
monomachist
monomachists
monomachy
monomane
monomania
monomaniac
monomaniacal

Literary usage of Monologuing

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1913)
"... and a good many in neither," and found Coleridge still monologuing, with the button In his hand, when he returned from town in the evening. ..."

2. The War with Mexico by Justin Harvey Smith (1919)
"... or lament in tragic tones at whist that he had to play against three; and the next moment he would be analyzing a campaign of Turenne, monologuing ..."

3. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1892)
"As he goes on with his monologuing—if we may coin a word—it is amusing to see how ready his conscience is to prick him. Not as to his opinions,— quite the ..."

4. A Library of American Literature from the Earliest Settlement to the Present by Arthur Stedman, Edmund Clarence Stedman (1894)
"We do speak; there is much monologuing, and I perform my share of it; but as for talking, quick interchange of ideas, fair give and take, we are on a par ..."

5. Studies from Life by Dinah Maria Mulock Craik (1861)
"A DICTUM has been lately reported of the great monologuing moralist of our times, the modern Samuel Johnson of adoring English Boswells, American Goldsmiths ..."

6. New Conceptions in Science: With a Foreword on the Relations of Science and by Carl Snyder (1903)
"The low, monologuing tone of the lecture never rises; occasionally there is a gleam of rather mordant humor, perhaps a passing reference to " some ideas ..."

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