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Synonyms I Can Use To Describe Someone Who Talks A Lot Without Pause

What do you call a person who asks a lot of questions (the word starts with ‘quis’)?

As others have said, one word to describe someone who poses (not asks) a lot of questions is “inquisitive.” [You don’t “ask” a question - you pose it. If you pose a question, you are asking something. I learned this while living in Switzerland and becoming fluent in French.]However, in order to provide a more complete answer, one must know something about why the questions are being posed. If it’s a hostile lawyer in court, he is more likely than not badgering the witness, and so he is a badgerer. If it’s someone posing questions to throw you off as you try to present an argument, then the person is digressive or obstructive or deflective. If it’s someone who just doesn’t want to accept perfectly good answers given and keeps asking the same thing in different ways, then he is a perseverator and perhaps also a quibbler. If it’s a small child posing questions to which she knows or ought to know the answer, and is only seeking attention, then she is obnoxious and needs a spanking. I’m sure I’ve omitted some contexts.

What is the synonym of " in the future"?

To me this sentence makes a contrast with the present. For instance, this time I made a phone call. In the future when I need to talk to them, I will go there.

So "From now on" is closest because that also is a decision to do something differently in the future than was done in the present.

"Afterwards" is relative to another event, and it means soon after. So you could say "I need to go to the store. First I have to stop home. Afterwards, I will go there."

"Going forward" could be used the same as "From now on" or "In the future", but I don't use that phrase.

What do you call a person who uses big words to sound smart?

potentially on the spectrum…I’m on the spectrum, people think I’m full of shit, but my accomplishments speak for themselves. I have little to no social skill, and with that; I have to sell “what I can do” and “the things I know”, rather than my “social skills”, in order to get the job, or girlfriend. Employers seem to want social butterflies, rather than an average worker, but I have nothing to offer socially, because that’s the part of me that is fake, synthetic, simulated.According to one, big words are “pats on the back”, from myself. When you’re socially awkward, those “back pats” aren’t coming from hands that don’t belong to you.Oftentimes, my technical writing is critiqued as “too much” and/or “too advanced”, when my audience is people within my career field. It’s said that the writing turns their brains off, as if I had control of some kind of light between the readers’ ears. I really don’t like talking, and I know that DDOS works in machine as well as Human hardware, I shoot for information overload. In my writing or my speaking, I really do not care how advanced you may be. Information that you don’t want, you don’t have to keep. If you tell me the words are too big, you should probably look those words up, to tell me how wrong I am (if that is the case).Information waayyyy outside my formal training/education: I don’t pay attention in class. When I hear something said, read something written, that fascinates me, because I see a practical application somewhere else; I dig, and I don’t stop digging until I’m satisfied with a level of expertise. “Outside my realm” doesn’t exist, since I live outside the box, outside my own realm, in all aspects, not counting the physical ones.“Pretentious” implies inflation, or exaggeration of one’s skill(s). I’ve been where I’ve been, done what I’ve done, am what I am. “SS” (Submarine Service) to me, was probably my greatest achievement, considering my social setbacks. If I say “I’ve done that”, I actually have. If I say “I can do that”, I actually can. If I say “I can learn any programming language”, well… I know a lot of different languages, that all happen to be in English (just to minimize your value). I can meet a level of “Guru” in approximately 3 +/- 1 months. My work, for me, is every waking moment. I can’t turn it off. This is one of the very few times I’ll say “I can’t”.So, before you have your preconceived notions about why I speak the way I speak, or write the way I write, this is, in part, why I am.

Is misogyny a misnomer?

I mean, with the exception perhaps of people like Marc Lépine (the École Polytechnique shooter), it's not like there a lot of men out there who flat out HATE women. I've noticed, though, that a lot of people like to use misogyny as a synonym for sexism. But are gender roles, or even the more extreme manifestations of sexism like female genital mutilation, honor/dowry killings, banning of girls' education, veiling of women, gender segregation, etc. really the result of HATE towards women? I think misogyny is a misnomer. How about you? Do you agree? If not, why?

What is a synonym for "Plays a large role"?

Is crucial? Is necessary? It depends on what context you are using...

Hope this helps!

What does talkative mean?

your very chatty

Main Entry: talk·a·tive
Pronunciation: 'to-k&-tiv
Function: adjective
: given to talking; also : full of talk
- talk·a·tive·ly adverb
- talk·a·tive·ness noun
synonyms TALKATIVE, LOQUACIOUS, GARRULOUS, VOLUBLE mean given to talk or talking. TALKATIVE may imply a readiness to engage in talk or a disposition to enjoy conversation . LOQUACIOUS suggests the power of expressing oneself articulately, fluently, or glibly . GARRULOUS implies prosy, rambling, or tedious loquacity . VOLUBLE suggests a free, easy, and unending loquacity .

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