English edit

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Etymology edit

logorrhea +‎ -ic

Adjective edit

logorrheic (comparative more logorrheic, superlative most logorrheic)

  1. Of, pertaining to, or exhibiting logorrhea, the excessive flow of words
    It was a long, logorrheic tale.
    • 1905, Richard von Krafft-Ebing, Text-book of Insanity[1], page 495:
      The content of this logorrheic delirium is mainly made up of recent events.
    • 1936 November 2, “Last Lap”, in Time[2], archived from the original on 22 December 2008:
      In a logorrheic swirl of speeches, talks, statements, challenges and replies Republican Nominee Alf Landon thrust halfway across the continent and all the way back from coast to coast last week []
    • 2007 February 2, Eugene Robinson, “An Inarticulate Kickoff”, in Washington Post[3]:
      I'll leave it to Joe Biden to explain (or figure out) why he used "clean" as one of a logorrheic string of adjectives describing his Senate colleague Barack Obama.

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