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Discover LudwigThe word 'volubility' is correct and usable in written English
It is defined as the quality or state of being voluble, or characterized by a ready and continuous flow of words. It can be used to describe someone who speaks or writes in a quick, fluent, and easy manner. Example: Her volubility was evident during the presentation, as she effortlessly spoke about complex ideas and engaged the audience with her eloquent words.
Dictionary
volubility
noun
The state of being voluble
synonyms
Exact(58)
Like the Tories, they want a national border force and emphasise the importance of local planning for population changes.One cause of this sudden volubility and consensus is that the scale of the increase in immigration since 2004 has only recently become apparent.
The subject: "Is creation a viable model of origins in today's modern scientific era?"Mr Ham debated with the punchy, authority-quoting fussiness of a scientist, while Mr Nye showed the corny volubility of a guy who just can't keep the good news to himself.
Though he belonged to no party, he was an adviser to many centrist politicians providing counsel with unstoppable volubility well into old age.The war, stints in jail and persecution meant he had no formal higher education.
Visiting Iranian expatriates are shocked by the volubility with which their compatriots disparage the whole regime, not just the conservative bit of it.
As yet, there's no word from Rushdie's people on why he retaliated in such a public way; though, judging from Glenn's volubility, this one could run and run.
Despite this, head teachers' leader Brian Lightman warned the BBC that he expected there to be some "volubility" in results, amid news that some schools had funnelled pupils into international GCSEs.
Her volubility in front of the camera doesn't translate into the tabloid arena, where a celebrity's words are frequently weapons to be turned back on them.
In his day, Kahn was the subject of many magazine stories, and most of them found it important to mention his girth — he was built, one journalist recorded, "like a prize-winning pear" — and his volubility.
The two of them were at a party where one of Asa's friends, Harkavy — a Jew, like Asa, and given to what Asa sees as Jewish behavior (volubility, wisecracking) — was singing old American ballads.
Scalia, having inspired his brethren to become his equal in volubility, now primarily distinguishes himself with the force, and sometimes the scorn, of his written opinions.
With a volubility uncongealed by the frigorific powers of villatic bashfulness, he ejaculated a voluminous replication from the universal tenor of whose contents I deduce the subsequent amalgamation of heterogeneous facts.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com