বিরক্তিকর, বাগ্বহুল, পল্লবিত
(1) Tediously prolonged or tending to speak or write at great length.
(2) Wordy.
(1) There is no doubt that the book is an interesting and instructive roundup of the problems that beset human societies, but it doesn't probe deeply enough, and in addition it is rather prolix .
(2) While JB's letter was heated and bare-knuckled, it landed many accurate punches, while your prolix retort was sadly disappointing.
(3) While much about that prolix and sloppily drafted document is unclear it would certainly constitute a further step towards the creation of a European federation.
(4) Wellford's first handbill, too prolix to be squeezed into a newspaper advertisement, appeared in 1801.
(5) The new work is far more prolix , diffuse, and ultimately self-indulgent.
(6) First, he indicated, and I now readily understand why, that the case put before him appeared to be u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510unduly prolix and the documents unnecessarily voluminousu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb.
(7) In the end, prolix though he may be, he convinces you that he is indeed one of the greatest living explorers of the inner self, and of the destinies that fiction offers.
(8) In sharp contrast to the autobiography, it tends to be prolix and muddled with excessive detail, and it often reads like a jumbled mix of fantastic stories.
(9) A punctilious listing of every detail produces prose that is prolix .
(10) His prolix , impassioned essay argued that Catholicism was one of Italy's contributions to European civilization and that Italy would contribute yet more once renewed in a federation led by a liberal papacy.
(11) The authors make a compelling case that the billable hours it takes American lawyers to write up prolix contracts often cost Americans more in fees than it would cost to go to court to resolve an ambiguity.
(12) She never particularly cared for them, finding the first too rigid and artificial, the second too prolix and maudlin.
(13) His argument is rather prolix - more so than my quotation shows.
(14) They tend to be prolix and very difficult to understand.
(15) In any ease, my colleagues writing in the same field, whether terse or prolix , are incredibly difficult.
(16) We both view computers with ambivalence (too easy to become prolix but a blessing when fixing bad paragraphs) and read too fast.
(17) They take the form more of an unbelievably prolix official diary.
(18) Burns was an accomplished practitioner of quadruple-speak, the prolix art of sounding profound and saying nothing at great length.
(19) The respondent's cross-examinations of the applicant's witnesses were somewhat prolix .
(20) Many writers struggled against the era's compulsive reserve not just with racy subject matter but also with compulsive prolixity .
long-winded
verbose
wordy
pleonastic
discursive
rambling
long-drawn-out
overlong
lengthy
protracted
interminable
windy
waffly
compact
concise
crisp
succinct
terse
Concise