"We got married, and I don't think I was ever that ambitious anyway, " she said in a burst of volubility, letting her husband pick up the thought.
32.
Ms . Jones'volubility about her breast cancer is only the latest surprising chapter in a political career that has pegged her as one of the most interesting up-and-comers in the Democratic Party.
33.
A disc of music by Copland, Xenakis, Brant, Boulez and Cage comes with spoken introductions, which in some cases rival or exceed the length of the performances, and such volubility was fairly typical.
34.
Though there has always been conspicuous talk in pictures-- voice-overs, explanatory passages, political speeches and other forms of volubility-- a kind of New Talk is now more prominent than the Old Talk.
35.
There is also technically an open RFC at Talk : Prequel, but it has not attracted new blood due to my ( and others'? ) volubility; and there are a number of other discussions floating around.
36.
As he discussed his wife's death and his new life, his volubility fled for a moment, and he jumped up to adjust a chair on the other side of the room that was not sitting perfectly in line with the carpet.
37.
Seen by literary critic Ioan Stanomir as marked by " volubility ", and thus contrasting with his famously taciturn and seemingly embittered nature, the form of local dialects and registers of speech, moving away from a mere imitation of the historical language.
38.
If the ability to convince other people about the merits of any single point of view depended mostly on a group's sheer magnetic presence, resonant volubility, and intelligently-honed organizational skills, then the gay community in America would be pretty hard to beat.
39.
David Levin directed the controversial play, which made pointed use of vulgarity, and contained provocative sketches such as " The Binding " in which Isaac begs his father Abraham not to hesitate to slaughter him, and " The Courting " which mocks Israeli volubility and arrogance.
40.
According to some who knew Franklin Roosevelt well, Kenneth S . Davis writes, the president _ far from being " simple and direct " _ was " complicated and devious . . . . his volubility a means not of true communication, but of concealment, diversion, dissemblement ."