Pronunciation: /vərˈboʊs/
adjective characterized by the use of many or too many words; wordy
A1 The teacher used simple words to explain the concept because the students were at an A1 level.
A2 The book was written in a way that was easy to understand for A2 learners.
B1 The article was quite verbose, using a lot of technical jargon that may be difficult for B1 students to understand.
B2 The presentation was clear and concise, making it easy for B2 students to follow along.
C1 The speaker was very verbose in his explanation, using complex language and detailed examples that challenged even C1 students.
C2 The research paper was extremely verbose, filled with in-depth analysis and intricate arguments that only C2 students could fully grasp.
formal The professor's writing style is often criticized for being too verbose.
informal She talks so much, she can be quite verbose at times.
slang He's a real chatterbox, always being so verbose.
figurative Her words flowed like a river, endlessly verbose in their expression.
verbosed
verboses
more verbose
most verbose
verbose
will be verbose
have verbosed
is being verbose
verbose
verbose
to verbose
verbosing
verbozing