4 dictionary results for: talk down
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) - Cite This Source - Share This
talk
[tawk] Pronunciation Key
—Related forms
[tawk] Pronunciation Key –verb (used without object)
–verb (used with object)
–noun
—Verb phrases
—Idioms
| 1. | to communicate or exchange ideas, information, etc., by speaking: to talk about poetry. |
| 2. | to consult or confer: Talk with your adviser. |
| 3. | to spread a rumor or tell a confidence; gossip. |
| 4. | to chatter or prate. |
| 5. | to employ speech; perform the act of speaking: to talk very softly; to talk into a microphone. |
| 6. | to deliver a speech, lecture, etc.: The professor talked on the uses of comedy in the tragedies of Shakespeare. |
| 7. | to give or reveal confidential or incriminating information: After a long interrogation, the spy finally talked. |
| 8. | to communicate ideas by means other than speech, as by writing, signs, or signals. |
| 9. | Computers. to transmit data, as between computers or between a computer and a terminal. |
| 10. | to make sounds imitative or suggestive of speech. |
| 11. | to express in words; utter: to talk sense. |
| 12. | to use (a specified language or idiom) in speaking or conversing: They talk French together for practice. |
| 13. | to discuss: to talk politics. |
| 14. | Informal. (used only in progressive tenses) to focus on; signify or mean; talk about: This isn't a question of a few hundred dollars—we're talking serious money. |
| 15. | to bring, put, drive, influence, etc., by talk: to talk a person to sleep; to talk a person into doing something. |
| 16. | the act of talking; speech; conversation, esp. of a familiar or informal kind. |
| 17. | an informal speech or lecture. |
| 18. | a conference or negotiating session: peace talks. |
| 19. | report or rumor; gossip: There is a lot of talk going around about her. |
| 20. | a subject or occasion of talking, esp. of gossip: Your wild escapades are the talk of the neighborhood. |
| 21. | mere empty speech: That's just a lot of talk. |
| 22. | a way of talking: a halting, lisping talk. |
| 23. | language, dialect, or lingo. |
| 24. | signs or sounds imitative or suggestive of speech, as the noise made by loose parts in a mechanism. |
| 25. | talk around, to bring (someone) over to one's way of thinking; persuade: She sounded adamant over the phone, but I may still be able to talk her around. |
| 26. | talk at,
|
| 27. | talk away, to spend or consume (time) in talking: We talked away the tedious hours in the hospital. |
| 28. | talk back, to reply to a command, request, etc., in a rude or disrespectful manner: Her father never allowed them to talk back. |
| 29. | talk down,
|
| 30. | talk down to, to speak condescendingly to; patronize: Children dislike adults who talk down to them. |
| 31. | talk of, to debate as a possibility; discuss: The two companies have been talking of a merger. |
| 32. | talk out,
|
| 33. | talk over,
|
| 34. | talk up,
|
| 35. | talk big, Informal. to speak boastingly; brag: He always talked big, but never amounted to anything. |
| 36. | talk someone's head or ear off, to bore or weary someone by excessive talk; talk incessantly: All I wanted was a chance to read my book, but my seatmate talked my ear off. |
| 37. | talk to death,
|
[Origin: 1175–1225; ME talk(i)en to converse, speak, deriv. (with -k suffix) of tale speech, discourse, tale; c. Fris (E dial.) talken
]
] —Related forms
talk·a·ble, adjective
talk·a·bil·i·ty, noun
talker, noun
—Synonyms 1. See speak. 4, 20. prattle. 34. discourse. 17. colloquy, dialogue, parley, confabulation.
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
American Heritage Dictionary - Cite This Source - Share This
| talk
(tôk) Pronunciation Key
v. talked, talk·ing, talks v. tr.
v. intr.
n.
Phrasal Verb(s): talk around
To address orally with no regard for or interest in a reaction or response. talk back
Idiom(s): talk big Informal To brag. Idiom(s): talk sense To speak rationally and coherently. [Middle English talken; see del-2 in Indo-European roots.] |
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The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
WordNet - Cite This Source - Share This
| talk down | |
verb | |
| 1. | belittle through talk |
| 2. | speak in a condescending manner, as if to a child; "He talks down to her" |
| 3. | direct and control (the flight of an airplane during landing) via radio; "the control tower talked down the plane whose pilot fell ill" |
WordNet® 3.0, © 2006 by Princeton University.
American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms - Cite This Source - Share This
talk down
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Belittle, depreciate, as in They talked down the importance of the move.
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Silence someone by speaking loudly and persistently, as in They talked down whatever objections she brought up. [Early 1800s]
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Help an aircraft to land by giving directions via radio, as in The fog was so thick the control tower had to talk us down. [c. 1940]
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See talk down to.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
Copyright © 1997 by The Christine Ammer 1992 Trust. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Copyright © 1997 by The Christine Ammer 1992 Trust. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
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