Verbiage Sentence Examples

verbiage
  • In any case the length of his work is not the result of verbiage or repetitions.

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  • Read some of the pages I have on my site, instead of giving me all this empty verbiage.

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  • The material contained in this book is narrow, repetitive, and padded out with excessive verbiage.

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  • Once you have the basic verbiage of Scrabble rules and strategy down, you can move on to expanding your vocabulary to include both everyday and rarer words that will help you win a game.

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  • There is plenty of verbiage surrounding the handbag and fashion industry, but when it comes to designer replicas, there is an important distinction to be made.

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  • But when this happened, Cartesianism was no longer either interesting or dangerous; its theories, taught as ascertained and verified truths, were as worthless as the systematic verbiage which preceded them.

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  • Along with this, there is a great deal of superfluous verbiage; and nowhere do we find a steady advance in the narration.

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  • The Yasna and many Yashts in great part consist of formulae of prayer which are as poor in contents as they are rich in verbiage.

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  • Here are extracts from their Journal and from Musical Opinion of that year, heavily pruned of much verbiage of the period.

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  • Most people do not think about this seriously enough and believe that more verbiage is better than less - the opposite is the case.

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  • Let's have less of your dense, abstruse legal verbiage.

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  • To the other powers it seemed, at best " verbiage " and " exalted nonsense," at worst an effort of the tsar to establish the hegemony of Russia on the goodwill of the smaller signatory powers.

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  • As to specific verbiage used by traditionalists, I do n't have time at the moment to look up samples from Church history.

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  • This trait is often reflected in his writings since he is not one to fill a blank page with a lot of useless verbiage; every word is measured, counted and on the page for a reason.

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  • Many extended auto warranties contain specific (and often confusing) verbiage that says it will cover either "wear and tear" problems or "mechanical breakdown" problems with a vehicle.

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  • No one is quarreling with the maxim to prune all unnecessary verbiage.

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  • Let 's have less of your dense, abstruse legal verbiage.

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