Garrulous

Garrulous

Garrulous


GAIR-uh-lus

Definition

(adjective) Prone to speaking at excessive length about trivial or loosely connected subjects; tiresomely talkative.

Example

The garrulous professor spent so long on his opening anecdote that he never actually reached the lecture — and somehow, nobody minded.

Word Origin

Garrulous derives from the Latin garrulus, meaning “talkative” or “chattering,” rooted in garrire — “to chatter” or “to babble.” The same root gives us gargle, both words sharing the sense of sound produced loosely and without great purpose. It entered English in the 17th century, used to describe the kind of talker who fills every silence not because they have something to say but because silence itself is intolerable to them.

Fun Fact

The ancient Greeks had a mythological explanation for unstoppable talking — the nymph Echo, cursed by Hera to repeat only the last words spoken to her, was the divine embodiment of speech without substance. But the most celebrated garrulous figure in classical literature is arguably Polonius from Shakespeare’s Hamlet — a character so incapable of brevity that even his advice to “be brief” runs on for several lines before he gets to the point. Shakespeare used him partly as a satirical portrait of the verbose courtiers he observed at the Elizabethan court, and Polonius remains so perfectly drawn that drama teachers still use him as the textbook example of a man who mistakes the sound of his own voice for wisdom.

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