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22 Sentences With "talked freely"

How to use talked freely in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "talked freely" and check conjugation/comparative form for "talked freely". Mastering all the usages of "talked freely" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Mr. Clinton said Judge Ginsburg talked freely about all of this.
Women talked freely about sex, and expected sexual gratification from their partners.
A trained corporate lawyer, he talked freely with only occasional glances at notes.
"We've talked freely about it amongst our group, and so that's my job," Brown said.
Theodore Roosevelt, the first great Republican Progressive, fought a Presidential campaign on the issue of 'trust busting' and talked freely about malefactors of great wealth.
With heartfelt honesty, the Jennings told their story, and Jazz talked freely with Walters about being a girl who the world believed to be a boy.
" He said she had talked freely about her experience: "She didn't want to be ashamed of herself and wanted people to know there was help out there.
He had agreed to be interviewed and he talked freely about his mental illness and his relationship with the governor, as well as about his life and his decades in the area.
Below, we talked freely about topics like his teenage love of skating and how brands often lazily misappropriate subcultures, as well as Coppens's goal of ensuring his projects never feel like a gimmick.
Platform24 had invited me to give the lecture, and I talked freely not just about Mr. Erdogan but at even greater length about President Trump and the threat he had become to the free press in America with relentless attempts to delegitimize any reputable media outlet that dared criticize him.
In an exclusive interview with SurvivorNet, which is the world's first video and streaming platform dedicated to cancer prevention and treatment news, Jean, 54, talked freely about how she's been relying on her faith, Religious Science (which incorporates ancient healing practices like sound healing, mediation and Reiki) to get through this difficult time.
Tubou would say but little while the men were present; but he > talked freely after they went. He appears to rise above many of his > countrymen as to denying himself, and as to property and the favour of man. > He is displeased with his countrymen for their treatment of us at this part. On 2 November 1827, Mr. Turner and Mr. Gross arrived in Tongatapu.
Surrey police were reportedly advised of this hacking at the time, but no action was taken. Journalists working at News of the World after Andy Coulson became chief editor in 2003 claimed that Coulson talked freely about using the "dark arts," including phone hacking, and that "everybody knew. The office cat knew." There were thousands of phone hacking victims during this period from all walks of life.
Alfonso XII, King of Spain: The young King and Grant talked freely about the burdens of being head of state For the remainder of October through November Grant visited Spain, Portugal and Gibraltar. To avoid confusion of Grant's diplomatic status as ex-President, he was awarded the honorary rank of Captain General of the Spanish Army. He was received at San Sebastian by Emilio Castelar, ex-President of the Spanish Republic. Grant was enthusiastic about their meeting and he personally thanked Castelar for all he had done for the United States.
Using his own money for travel, Marshall visited many military hospitals during the war. In particular, he focused on encouraging soldiers with amputations to keep a positive attitude and not to think of themselves as handicapped or limited. Despite his usual reluctance to discuss his own injury, he talked freely about his personal experiences in order to give these amputees tips on how to use and adjust to their new artificial limbs. Although mostly kept private, a 1945 article in Motion Picture Magazine reported, against Marshall's wishes, on his work at military hospitals.
For example, when he was in New England he saw that people there spoke tersely and usually waited for the newcomer to come up to him and initiate conversation. However, in Midwestern cities, people were more outgoing and were willing to come right up to him. He explained how strangers talked freely without caution as a sense of longing for something new and being somewhere other than the place they were. They were so used to their everyday life that when someone new came to town, they were eager to explore new information and imagine new places.
While incarcerated, Moore refused to comment on the murders, but talked freely about his character, his poetry and his innocence. According to him, he had just arrived in town from Moberly to celebrate Christmas, and simply happened upon the grisly crime scene. He also denied all the claims made by the newspapers about his nighttime morgue visits, proudly stating that nobody in his family had even been convicted of a crime and that this was his first time in prison. Upon further investigation, Prosecuting Attorney E. C. Anderson quickly debunked Moore's explanations, stating that there were witnesses and enough circumstantial evidence to connect him to the killings.
Rivers lived for many years in North Bend, Washington with his wife, Lisa, where he gardened, tended to his bees and chickens, hiked, and recorded and played music in his home studio. To fight his fear of flying, he learned to fly a plane, and eventually bought his own. He talked freely on the air about his hard-partying days, which ended when he entered rehab to treat his alcoholism in 1989, shortly after he moved to Washington. Rivers was featured in an interview about his enjoyment of hiking in a 2014 summer issue of Washington Trails Magazine (a publication of the Washington Trails Association).
Meanwhile, an ideological rift developed in the KDP between the intellectual and leftists Ibrahim Ahmad and Jalal Talabani on the one hand, and Mulla Mustafa and the Barzanis on the other. Mulla Mustafa "talked freely, with a bitterness amounting to hatred, against the... intellectual presumptuousness of the KDP politicians, singling out Ibrahim Ahmad for his particular dislike". While Ahmad complained of Mulla Mustafa's "selfishness, arbitrariness, unfairness, tribal backwardness and even his dishonesty." But while each wanted to reduce the others' influence in the KDP, each also knew that the other was indispensable in securing the loyalty of their respective support-bases – the tribal villagers and nomads for Barzani, and the urban and educated for Ahmad/Talabani.
A few days later Margaret returns home, having been away on a protracted visit to her brother Robert in Croydon. With her come her brother and his overbearing and snobbish wife. When they leave, Emma declines an invitation to accompany them back. Here the story broke off, but Edward Austen-Leigh's Memoir gave a hint of how it was to continue: > When the author's sister, Cassandra, showed the manuscript of this work to > some of her nieces, she also told them something of the intended story; for > with this dear sister - though, I believe, with no one else - Jane seems to > have talked freely of any work that she might have in hand.
Miller (then Hoback) was working as the bookkeeper for Richard Nixon's re-election campaign in 1972 when Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein contacted her for information. Woodward has stated that she was just as important as Deep Throat for unveiling the Watergate Scandal because she had knowledge about where money was going and who it was coming from.Woodward downplays Deepthroat accessed 8-2-2015 Hoback was one of the few people who talked freely with Woodward and Bernstein, allowing them to come to her home, although she has stated she was "pretty nervous and scared" and was "frustrated that the truth wasn't coming out". She had notified the FBI and felt it was not handling the investigation properly.
While she was writing "The Deadly Choices at Memorial", Fink decided to expand the article into a book. Since she "kept finding out new facts and trying to fit them into the story because they seemed essential", she was encouraged by her editor to save the extra material to publish in a book. Expanding on her original research, Fink conducted over 500 interviews with people who were at the hospital during the disaster, families of the dead patients, hospital executives, law enforcement officials and ethicists; she wished to interview Dr. Anna Pou, one of the principal characters of the story, about the allegations of euthanasia but Pou refused based on her lawyer's advice. Fink said that while "some of the medical and nursing professionals were observing a code of silence", she was impressed by the openness of several staff members, including two doctors who talked freely of their decision to euthanize their patients.

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