Volubility
1Volubility — Vol u*bil i*ty, n. [L. volubilitas: cf. F. volubilit[ e].] The quality or state of being voluble (in any of the senses of the adjective). [1913 Webster] …
2volubility — glibness, garrulity, loquacity, talkativeness (see under TALKATIVE) Analogous words: fluency, glibness, eloquence, articulateness (see corresponding adjectives at VOCAL) …
3volubility — voluble ► ADJECTIVE ▪ speaking or spoken incessantly and fluently. DERIVATIVES volubility noun volubly adverb. ORIGIN originally in senses «rotating about an axis» and «tending to change»: from Latin volvere to roll …
4volubility — noun see voluble …
5volubility — See voluble. * * * …
6volubility — noun a) the state of being voluble b) the degree to which someone is voluble …
7volubility — Synonyms and related words: big mouth, candor, communicativeness, conversableness, effusion, effusiveness, flow of words, flowing tongue, fluency, fluent tongue, flux de bouche, flux de paroles, flux of words, frankness, garrulity, garrulousness …
8volubility — (Roget s IV) n. Syn. fluency, loquacity, garrulousness; see eloquence 1 , garrulity …
9volubility — vol·u·bil·i·ty || ‚vÉ‘ljÉ™ bɪlÉ™tɪ /‚vÉ’ljÊŠ b n. fluency, talkativeness, loquaciousness, garrulousness; condition of being able to turn easily on an axis …
10volubility — n. 1. Fluency, glibness, readiness of speech, command of language, facility of expression. 2. Changeableness, mutability, inconstancy …