View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Verbose.
Verbose
Verbose meaning
Containing or using more words than necessary; long-winded, wordy. | Producing detailed output for diagnostic purposes.
Synonyms of Verbose
Example sentences (20)
Dame's solitary training in his small room ahead of his first title fight is reminiscent of Clubber's determined training in the film, while both characters use their more verbose sides to call out and enrage their opponents.
The song’s evocative lyrics hover just on the verge of being too clever and too verbose, but work perfectly for what he’s trying to pull off.
The typically verbose Ridley-Thomas was quiet through the night.
Although Joe is not a very verbose character, Phoenix is able to convey his emotional state through the power of his physical expressions.
For example, I enjoy using the lay-flat mode for long-form articles on the internet because I can read lengthy, verbose content with minimal scrolling.
For writing copy, I personally find Chat GPT too verbose.
The characters may not be particularly verbose, but Evans is able to identify the aspects of heroism through the physical movements alone.
Bored and observant people on the internet noticed that the Spanish accent with which Hilaria had spoken in the past was mysteriously absent from her verbose video.
Caradee’s script is probably too verbose and much of it is predictable.
The verbose cleaning woman who discovered the body provides both sarcasm and advice to the detectives and seems to discover the right evidence along the way.
That said, it only took him a few seconds to actually jailbreak an iPhone X and have it boot with verbose messages.
The verbose artist is known for his wildly satirical works replete with a dynamic cast of characters, many of whom become familiar through their repeat appearances.
The most common complaint about Kubernetes is how complex and verbose its manifests, or application definitions, are.
Dickens, Chapter 10 By the 1880s the term "officialese" was in use, defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as, "The formal and typically verbose language considered characteristic of officials or official documents".
Gowers (1954), p. 1 A substantive objection by Vallins to "the cult of 'plain English'" was his view that verbose phrases lose important nuances when reduced to plain words.
His fictional spy network was so efficient and verbose that his German handlers were overwhelmed and made no further attempts to recruit any additional spies in the UK, according to the Official History of British Intelligence in WW2.
However, the experienced designers usually avoid these compact forms and use a more verbose coding style for the sake of readability and maintainability.
Operators were forced to transmit verbose messages on fixed frequencies and at fixed times and intervals.
Plautus might seem more verbose, but where he lacks in physical comedy he makes up for it with words, alliteration and paronomasia (punning).
Some are very compact but abstract, and some are verbose but straightforward and concrete.