Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"volubly" Definitions
  1. if you talk volubly, you talk a lot and with enthusiasm
  2. if you express something volubly, you express yourself strongly using many words

32 Sentences With "volubly"

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

She volubly recounts the mishaps that plagued Franco Zeffirelli's monumental staging.
Everywhere you turn, grown-ups are volubly voicing their anxieties about the smartphone generation.
"You look great," one and all had volubly exclaimed at my coming and then at my going.
Yet somehow we've reached a point where people in the medical profession actively, viscerally, volubly hate their computers.
Mr. Trump volubly asked how things were going in getting President Zelensky to announce an investigation of the Bidens.
As we spoke, a middle-aged customer who had been chatting volubly at the counter, Jakob Raff, grew quiet.
That's where Alan Dershowitz, the liberal lawyer who now volubly defends Trump on TV, ran into the president on Christmas Eve.
After playing through the album on her stereo, she conversed volubly about the music across her kitchen table, over cups of strong coffee.
And the crowd, I have to say, was almost as volubly ecstatic as it was when I saw the show with Ms. Midler.
And after rushing to perfect a nuclear bomb, and celebrating volubly at each successful test, Mr Kim declared that in fact he wanted a "nuclear-free Korean peninsula".
He could make out on deck John Huth, a Harvard physicist and member of the international team that discovered the Higgs boson particle, vomiting volubly off the port side.
All the while, conservatives complain volubly about subsidies to renewable energy and the US energy secretary tries to use them as an excuse to dump even more public money on coal companies.
This inevitably creates a greater gap between the audience and the play's volubly disaffected inhabitants, who in the 1986 "Road" were known to directly engage those who dared to gawp at them.
Mr. Trump has spoken volubly about the nation's drug problems, yet the list includes the White House's Office of National Drug Control Policy, which dispenses grants to reduce drug use and drug trafficking.
" Brody writes, "Seb launches into his elaborate mansplanation of the origins and merits of jazz, talking volubly and inexhaustibly over the music he loves as if it were nothing but the local background station.
During the national college football championship game in January 2013, Musburger volubly praised the looks of Katherine Webb, the girlfriend of Alabama quarterback A. J. McCarron, when the camera picked her out of the crowd.
"It became clear that the best way to stay competitive and protect the business for long term" was to move production, an executive told employees, who were volubly and understandably upset by the looming loss of good, family-sustaining jobs.
There exists a proud sense of federal statehood (achieved only in 1959) that belies its distance from Washington, DC. So too is there a sizeable minority of Inuit and other indigenous peoples who are volubly demanding greater cultural and financial rights after generations of discrimination.
In an impromptu, 45-minute Rose Garden news conference after the men met for lunch at the White House, Mr. Trump and Mr. McConnell both put on a display of awkward camaraderie, as the president went on volubly, fielding question after question as the senator fidgeted and spoke only occasionally.
On the other hand, John Heffernan in the title role volubly communicates a modern-day soldier all but undone by his own misdeeds in a view of the play that wrenches the action out of Scotland and into an indeterminately gray netherworld that puts one in mind of the various charnel houses that exist across the globe today.
Then emerged the cosmopolitan and intellectual sophisticate Frank Bidart, whose poetry over five decades has volubly modeled a wholly new approach to autobiographical material, chiefly by giving voice to the inner travails of other people's lives, both real and imagined, while also laying bare, in stark Romanesque language, the contours of an Oedipal, overbearing childhood with his mother and a fraught, disappointing relationship with his playboy father.
They called the janitor and expostulated volubly, but all to no effect.
Maybe they also resented that his salary was well in excess of their own." Alan Gibson wrote about him more volubly: "He thought about the game a lot. Many Australian cricketers do, more than English cricketers probably, but McCool was in some ways an untypical Australian. He had a diffidence and gentleness, which do not always spring to mind as familiar Australian qualities: but he had plenty of Australian determination.
Perdiccas opened by exposing (the manner is not stated) Alexander's "chair", from which he rendered official decisions. On it were his diadem, robe, cuirass and signet ring, which he was accustomed to wear when he spoke ex cathedra. At the sight of them the crowd grieved volubly. Perdiccas addressed the grief, saying that the gods had given them Alexander for an appointed time, and now that it was over, they had taken him back.
Ludwig with Eccles at the Kite-Flying Station in Glossop Work on the jet-powered propeller proved frustrating for Wittgenstein, who had very little experience working with machinery.Mays, p.137 Jim Bamber, a British engineer who was his friend and classmate at the time, reported that > "when things went wrong, which often occurred, he would throw his arms > around, stomp about, and swear volubly in German."Mays, p.138 According to William Eccles, another friend from that period, Wittgenstein then turned to more theoretical work, focusing on the design of the propeller — a problem that required relatively sophisticated mathematics.
In 2010, Edelstein presented a paper at a meeting of the American Physical Society in which he disclosed his findings that the reason that space travel at the speed of light had not been achieved is that according to Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity, spaceships would be exposed at such speeds to a dose of radiation that would be fatal to crew members. Edelstein suggested that his calculations showed the crew of the Starship Enterprise would have suffered this fate if their travels had not been fiction. Star Trek fans protested volubly on numerous internet discussion boards.
In The New York Times, Ben Brantley lauded Heart's Desire (the first play) as "achingly, aggressively funny" and the ending of Blue Kettle (the second play) as "heartbreaking". Matt Wolf of Variety wrote that "both plays speak volubly and wisely about language and emotions in disarray". Wolf stated that the finale of Blue Kettle is "comparable in affect to the closing lines of the playwright’s “Top Girls.” Moira Buffini of The Guardian listed Blue Heart as one of her favorite Churchill works, saying of Blue Kettle that "[the characters'] anguish is felt more fully in this desperate inarticulacy.
He helped broker a deal under which Ukraine gave up all the nuclear weapons it had inherited after the breakup of the Soviet Union. Alexander Vershbow, a former U.S. ambassador to Moscow, first met Mamedov in the 1980s; Vershbow describes Mamedov as "a real problem solver, somebody who's always defended their interests quite aggressively—and volubly—but has been a good partner. Every U.S. ambassador who's dealt with him has found him to be a guy who could get things done."Washington Post Foreign Service article on Mamedov Georgiy Mamedov holds a Ph.D. in history and speaks English and Swedish in addition to Russian.
Group A cars also had to run with a smaller turbo restrictor than previously, which was a particular handicap for Ford, since the rally Escort's seven-speed gearbox was not well suited to a lower-revving engine. Delecour, although complaining volubly in interviews about the rule changes, finished second on the Monte Carlo. Bruno Thiry then led the Corsica Rally and looked likely to win, until a wheel bearing failure, which under previous rules his mechanics would have been able to rectify, put him out of the rally. Delecour finished second, but there were no further top-three placings that season and Ford finished at the bottom of the manufacturers' championship.
From the original Tsotsitaal, the noun tsotsitaal came to refer to any gang or street language in South Africa. However, the specific variety behind the term would depend on the languages actually present in the specific urban environment were one tsotsitaal appears. The most important tsotsitaal nowadays in South Africa is the one from the township of Soweto, the largest township and the place which shows the most diverse linguistic setting in the country. It was originally known as Iscamtho or Isicamtho (from Zulu, it is a combination of the class 7 prefix isi- here representing language — see grammatical gender and Sesotho nouns; with a derivation of ukuqamunda [uk’u!amunda], meaning “talk volubly”), but it is now more often referred to as Ringas (from English ringers, as people form a ring to chat).
A physical chemist and his wife (the MacRaes), who have been in residence in Luna City on the Moon for some time, spend much of their time volubly regretting having ever left Earth. When this attitude results in social conflict with "Loonies" who love their home, the pair feel isolated, misunderstood, and put-upon. They decide to return "dirt-side", only to discover that the Earth of their imaginations bears only the faintest of resemblances to the actuality, which includes things unheard of in Luna, like smog, unpleasant weather, the common cold, and repairmen who refuse to make house calls. Ultimately, they discover that all they really want is to go back to Luna City, where they are welcomed with open arms by their peers (now that they have realized that the Moon is "home" after all) and settle down to be happy "Lunatics".
He wrote therein volubly on emancipation of slaves, which he enumerated at 800,000, and concluded with this declaration of love and devotion upon his return, > But God bless thee, England, and crown thee with blessings, thou glorious > land of my fathers! When I saw the two broad lights on the black Lizard > again, my heart swelled with that unconquerable passion which I used to feel > on returning from a distant school and sprinting into my dear mother's arms. > O my country, I have no pride but that I belong to thee, and can write my > name in the muster roll of mankind, an Englishman. In 1826, he was called to the bar, and in 1829 married his first cousin Sara, daughter of the poet, of whom he wrote three years earlier during their courtship, > Now, reader, if you are an Englishman, (for I know nothing about the Scotch > and Irish,) think over your own family, your sisters, or perhaps you have a > cousin or so, ---.

No results under this filter, show 32 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.