What is another word for prolixity?

Pronunciation: [pɹəlˈɪksɪti] (IPA)

Prolixity is a term used to describe those who tend to be overly verbose or long-winded in their speech or writing. There are several synonyms for prolixity that can be used to describe this tendency, such as verbosity, long-windedness, wordiness, and loquaciousness. All of these terms refer to someone who uses too many words to express a simple idea or message. Other words that are similar in meaning to prolixity include turgidity, circumlocution, and palaver. No matter which synonym is used, the idea is the same: a person who is prone to prolixity tends to use more words than necessary, making their communication unnecessarily difficult to understand.

Synonyms for Prolixity:

What are the hypernyms for Prolixity?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for prolixity?

Prolixity is the quality of having an excess of words or a rambling, long-winded style of writing or speaking. Its antonyms include brevity, conciseness, pithiness, and succinctness, all of which refer to the quality of being concise, precise, and to the point. Brevity is the use of few words to express a lot of information, while conciseness is the quality of expressing much using as few words as possible. Pithiness refers to a concise and forceful use of language to make a point, while succinctness refers to the quality of being brief and clearly expressed. These antonyms of prolixity are essential in effective communication to convey meaning without wasting time or confusing the reader or listener.

What are the antonyms for Prolixity?

Usage examples for Prolixity

I shall, to avoid prolixity in a barren chapter of the two extremes of life, select about every tenth year from the register.
"An History of Birmingham (1783)"
William Hutton
Perhaps I shall not be charged with prolixity, that unpardonable sin against the reader, when it is considered, that three thousand years are deposited in the compass of one hundred and forty little pages.
"An History of Birmingham (1783)"
William Hutton
In the prolixity and slow beating out of the thought in some of the 'cantica' we note the beginning of a process unfamiliar to the Roman mind, for which the forms of the Latin language were not yet adapted.
"The Roman Poets of the Republic"
W. Y. Sellar

Famous quotes with Prolixity

  • ...Burgess' chief themes...a Catholic sense of sin and a social sense of disaster, a fascination with the polymathic and polyglot artist and the strange and often gross and unbidden sources of art. Nor had Burgess taught languages or studied Joyce for nothing, though where Joyce sought the final consolation of form he sought those of prolixity; he was also a very effective literary critic, obsessed with language and punning....was happy to describe himself as a craftsman and not an aesthetician of writing; he is a Joycean without the formalism or indeed the restraint....inventive prolixity...gifts of linguistic and technical discovery; Burgess is a great postmodern storehouse of contemporary writing, opening the modern plurality of languages, discourses and codes for our use.
    Anthony Burgess

Related words: excessive wordiness, long-windedness, verbosity, wordiness

Related questions:

  • Does prolixity make a text easier to read?
  • Is prolixity appropriate for all texts?
  • What is prolixity in writing?
  • How to avoid prolixity in writing?
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