verbality
English
Noun
verbality (countable and uncountable, plural verbalities)
- The state or characteristic of consisting of words; that which consists simply of verbiage.
- 1914, F. C. S. Schiller, "Dr. Mercier and Formal Logic," Mind, New Series, vol. 23, no. 92, p. 568:
- For my own investigations of traditional logic lead irresistably to the conclusion that it is essentially an equivocation between psychology and verbality.
- 1989, A. Kibédi Varga, "Criteria for Describing Word-and-Image Relations," Poetics Today, vol. 10, no. 1, p. 37:
- In other words, to read a visual poem is to betray it; to restore it to verbality is to eliminate half of its meaning.
- 1914, F. C. S. Schiller, "Dr. Mercier and Formal Logic," Mind, New Series, vol. 23, no. 92, p. 568:
- Proficiency or fluency in the use of words.
- 1966, Shirley S. Angrist, "Communication about Birth Control: An Exploratory Study of Freshman Girls' Information and Attitudes," Journal of Marriage and Family, vol. 28, no. 3, p. 285:
- Generally, high communicators were found to be: college majors in humanities or natural sciences, Jewish or Catholic persons, first-born or only children, and those high in verbality.
- 1966, Shirley S. Angrist, "Communication about Birth Control: An Exploratory Study of Freshman Girls' Information and Attitudes," Journal of Marriage and Family, vol. 28, no. 3, p. 285:
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