See also: talk-aholic

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

talk +‎ -aholic

Adjective edit

talkaholic (comparative more talkaholic, superlative most talkaholic)

  1. Of, pertaining to, or characterized by incessant talking.
    • 1990 January 12, Janet Maslin, “Movie Review: American Boy (1978)”, in New York Times, retrieved 29 January 2014:
      Mr. Prince, though only in his late 20's at the time, has a haggard look, dark-ringed eyes and a nervous, frenetic manner. . . . With talkaholic flair, he describes injecting adrenaline into a companion who has overdosed, shooting a thief during a gas station holdup, and crying so noisily during a drug bust that three policemen wound up reassuring him.
    • 1995 July 12, Decca Aitkenhead, “One minute, sir, my mobile's ringing”, in The Independent, UK, retrieved 29 January 2014:
      The mobile phone revolution has reached its logical target: the dial-obsessed, digit-happy, talkaholic teenage market.

Noun edit

talkaholic (plural talkaholics)

  1. An incessant talker.
    • 1984, "Are you a Talkaholic?", New Woman, vol. 14, issues 1-6, p. 194 (Google snippet view):
      If you are a Talkaholic, you throw out words as you would darts to keep people away from you.
    • 2009, W. Shane Wilson, Enter the Guardians: Kyl, →ISBN, page 34:
      No words were spoken for a long time. This was plainly killing Kerra who was a talk-aholic.

Synonyms edit

Related terms edit