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TALKING REMOTE .COM

TALKING REMOTE .COM for sale. Premium Domain.

 

talk  (tôk)

v. talkedtalk·ingtalks
v.tr.

1. To articulate (words): The baby is talking sentences now.
2. To give expression to in words: talk treason.
3. To speak of or discuss (something): talk music; talk business;
4. To speak or know how to speak in (an idiom or language): talked French with the flight crew.
5. To gain, influence, or bring into a specified state by talking: talked me into coming; talked their way out of trouble.
6. To spend (a period of time) by or as if by talking: talked the evening away.
v.intr.

1. To converse by means of spoken language: We talked for hours. See Synonyms at speak.
2. To articulate words: The baby can talk.
3. To imitate the sounds of human speech: The parrot talks.
4. To express one’s thoughts or emotions by means of spoken language: talked about the pros and cons of the issue.
5. To convey one’s thoughts in a way other than by spoken words: talk with one’s hands.
6. To express one’s thoughts in writing: Voltaire talks about London in this book.
7. To parley or negotiate with someone: Let’s talk before continuing to fight.
8. To spread rumors; gossip: If you do that, people will talk.
9. To allude to something: Are you talking about last week?
10. To consult or confer with someone: I talked with the doctor.
11. To reveal information concerning oneself or others, especially under pressure: Has the prisoner talked?
12. Informal To be efficacious: Money talks.
n.

1. An exchange of ideas or opinions; a conversation.
2. A speech or lecture.
3. Hearsay, rumor, or speculation: There is talk of bankruptcy.
4. A subject of conversation: a musical that is the talk of the town.
5. A conference or negotiation. Often used in the plural: peace talks.
6. Jargon; slang: prison talk.
7. Empty speech or unnecessary discussion: much talk and no action.
8. A particular manner of speech: baby talk; honeyed talk.
9. Something, such as the sounds of animals, felt to resemble human talk: whale talk.

Phrasal Verbs:

talk around

1. To persuade: I talked them around to my point of view.
2. To speak indirectly about: talked around the subject but never got to the point.
talk at

To address orally with no regard for or interest in a reaction or response.
talk back

1. To make an impertinent or insolent reply.
2. To make a belligerent response: heavy guns talking back.
talk down

1. To depreciate: talked down the importance of the move.
2. To speak with insulting condescension: talked down to her subordinates.
3. To silence (a person), especially by speaking in a loud and domineering manner.
4. To direct and control (the flight of an aircraft during an approach for landing) by radioed instructions either from the ground or a nearby aircraft.
talk out

1. To discuss (a matter) exhaustively: I talked out the problem with a therapist.
2. To resolve or settle by discussion.
3. Chiefly British To block (proposed legislation) by filibustering.
talk over

1. To consider thoroughly in conversation; discuss: talked the matter over.
2. To win (someone) over by persuasion: talked them over to our side.
talk up

1. To speak in favor of; promote: talked the candidate up; talked up the new product.
2. To speak up in a frank, often insolent manner.

Idioms:

talk big Informal

To brag.
talk sense

To speak rationally and coherently.

[Middle English talken; see del-2 in Indo-European roots.]
re·mote  (rĭ-mōt′)

adj. re·mot·erre·mot·est

1.

a. Located far away; distant in space.
b. Hidden away; secluded: a remote hamlet.
2. Distant in time: the remote past.
3. Faint; slight: a remote possibility; had not the remotest interest.
4. Far removed in connection or relevance: a cause remote from everyday concerns.
5. Distantly related by blood or marriage: a remote cousin.
6. Distant in manner; aloof.
7. Operating or controlled from a distance: remote sensors.
8. Computer Science Located at a distance from another computer that is accessible by cables or other communications links: a remote terminal.
n.

1. A radio or television broadcast originating from a point outside a studio.
2. A remote control device.

[Middle English, from Old French remot, from Latin remōtus, past participle of removēreto remove; see remove.]

re·mote′ly adv.
re·mote′ness n.

 

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