| 1. | the act, utterance, or discourse of a person who speaks. |
| 2. | speakings, literary works composed for recitation, as ancient bardic poetry; oral literature. |
| 3. | that speaks. |
| 4. | used in, suited to, or involving speaking or talking: the speaking voice. |
| 5. | of or pertaining to declamation. |
| 6. | giving information as if by speech: a speaking proof of a thing. |
| 7. | highly expressive: speaking eyes. |
| 8. | lifelike: a speaking likeness. |
| 9. | not on speaking terms, not or no longer in a relationship of open, willing, or ready communication, as because of resentment or estrangement: They had a squabble during the holidays, and now they're not on speaking terms. |
| 10. | on speaking terms,
|
,verb, spoke or (Archaic
) spake; spo⋅ken or (Archaic
) spoke; speak⋅ing.| 1. | to utter words or articulate sounds with the ordinary voice; talk: He was too ill to speak. |
| 2. | to communicate vocally; mention: to speak to a person of various matters. |
| 3. | to converse: She spoke with him for an hour. |
| 4. | to deliver an address, discourse, etc.: to speak at a meeting. |
| 5. | to make a statement in written or printed words. |
| 6. | to communicate, signify, or disclose by any means; convey significance. |
| 7. | Phonetics. to produce sounds or audible sequences of individual or concatenated sounds of a language, esp. through phonation, amplification, and resonance, and through any of a variety of articulatory processes. |
| 8. | (of a computer) to express data or other information audibly by means of an audio response unit. |
| 9. | to emit a sound, as a musical instrument; make a noise or report. |
| 10. | Chiefly British. (of dogs) to bark when ordered. |
| 11. | Fox Hunting. (of a hound or pack) to bay on finding a scent. |
| 12. | to utter vocally and articulately: to speak words of praise. |
| 13. | to express or make known with the voice: to speak the truth. |
| 14. | to declare in writing or printing, or by any means of communication. |
| 15. | to make known, indicate, or reveal. |
| 16. | to use, or be able to use, in oral utterance, as a language: to speak French. |
| 17. | (of a computer) to express or make known (data, prompts, etc.) by means of an audio response unit. |
| 18. | Nautical. to communicate with (a passing vessel) at sea, as by voice or signal: We spoke a whaler on the fourth day at sea. |
| 19. | Archaic. to speak to or with. |
| 20. | speak for,
|
| 21. | speak out, to express one's opinion openly and unreservedly: He was not afraid to speak out when it was something he believed in strongly. |
| 22. | so to speak, to use a manner of speaking; figuratively speaking: We still don't have our heads above water, so to speak. |
| 23. | speak by the book, to say with great authority or precision: I can't speak by the book, but I know this is wrong. |
| 24. | speak well for, to be an indication or reflection of (something commendable); testify admirably to: Her manners speak well for her upbringing. |
| 25. | to speak of, worth mentioning: The country has no mineral resources to speak of. |

speaking
the rationale and practice of persuasive public speaking. It is immediate in its audience relationships and reactions, but it may also have broad historical repercussions. The orator may become the voice of political or social history.
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