"Prolix" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Talkative or detailed to a fault; verbose.
Example: "His prolix lectures put many students to sleep."
Here are 5 examples of the word "prolix":
The word "prolific" refers to producing or capable of producing a large amount of something, such as ideas, content, or output, often at a high rate. It can also describe an abundance or profusion of something.<br><br>Example sentences:<br><br> The author is a prolific writer, having written over a dozen bestselling novels.<br> The new software update has made the server even more prolific, processing transactions at a much faster rate.<br> The garden has been incredibly prolific this year, producing an abundance of juicy tomatoes.<br><br>In a positive context, "prolific" implies a healthy and thriving creative output, or an abundance of a resource.
Prolificacy refers to the quality of producing or creating a large quantity of something, especially in a short amount of time. It is often used to describing someone's creativity, productivity, or ability to produce high-quality work or ideas at a rapid pace.<br><br>Example: "The novelist's prolificacy was evident in his many published books within a few years of starting his career."
Prolificness is the quality of being highly productive, creative, and successful in producing something, typically over a period of time. It describes someone or something that is very active, abundant, and fruitful in their output or achievements.<br><br>Example: "The artist's prolificness in painting resulted in the creation of dozens of masterpieces throughout her career."<br><br>Synonyms: productiveness, creativeness, fruitfulness, abundance, competence.
Prolinase (also known as proline iminopeptidase) is an enzyme that catalyzes the cleavage of the imide peptide bond between a proline residue and the amino acid residue preceding it, acting as a prolyl endopeptidase.
<strong>Prolix</strong>: (adjective) <br><br>Extremely long-winded or talkative; tediously verbose; circumlocutory. <br><br>Example: "The professor's prolix response to the simple question left the student confused."<br><br>Litotes: a more formal or literary term for "prolix".
Prolonged and excessive use of words, especially to the point of being tedious or boring.<br><br>Example: "The professor's prolixious explanation of the complex theory left the students yawning in class."
Prolixity refers to the quality of being excessively long-winded or verbose, often to the point of being tedious or boring.
Prolixness (noun) refers to the quality of speaking or writing at excessive length, often needlessly using many words. It describes lengthy, verbose, or wordy discourse that may include unnecessary details, elaborations, or phrases.
A prolocutor is a person who plays a role speaking on behalf of someone else, either officially or informally.
A programming language, computational paradigm, and logic programming language developed in the 1970s by a team at the University of Glasgow led by Alan Martin, Mike Clocksin and Timothy McCarthy. <br><br>The word "prolog" is a shortened form of "program logics" or "logic programming". <br><br>It is a general-purpose language based on formal logic, particularly resolution. Prolog is used for formal problems based on first-order logic.
To prologize means to use or to support the philosophical and theoretical framework of logic developed by philosophers Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and Peter Abelard, particularly the dialectical method.<br><br>However, in modern usage, prologize is often used more broadly to mean to elaborate or provide an introduction to something, often excessively or tediously, before getting to the main point or punchline.