interloquty
Example
The candidates were encouraged to interloquty freely to demonstrate their spontaneous speaking skills.
Related Content
More Communication words
you
A1Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
point
A1A point is a specific place, position, or a single idea in a discussion. It can also refer to the sharp end of an object or a unit used for scoring in a game.
information
A2Information refers to facts, details, or knowledge provided or learned about something or someone. It is used to describe the data we receive to help us understand a situation or topic better.
perceive
C1To become aware of something through the senses, particularly sight or hearing, or to interpret and understand a situation in a specific way. It often involves recognizing a subtle quality or identifying a deeper meaning beyond surface-level observation.
bombast
B2High-sounding language with little meaning, used to impress people. It refers to speech or writing that is pompous, inflated, or overly pretentious without having much substance.
misdictious
C1To communicate or record verbal information inaccurately, specifically by confusing similar-sounding words or misinterpreting dictated instructions. It is primarily used in technical or test-based contexts to describe a failure in precise verbal transmission.
extraloquist
C1To project one's voice so that it appears to originate from a source other than the speaker, typically used in performance or specialized vocal arts. It describes the action of speaking as if from outside one's own body or through an external medium.
overclamism
C1To make excessive, loud, or public assertions that inflate the importance or truth of a claim. It specifically refers to the act of pushing an argument beyond its factual or logical limits in a performative manner.
adpassant
C1To mention or address a secondary topic briefly and incidentally while focused on a primary task or discussion. It describes an action that occurs seamlessly 'in passing' without disrupting the main narrative or workflow.
anticredance
C1To systematically undermine or proactively withhold belief from a statement, theory, or source of information. It refers to the deliberate act of challenging the reliability or truthfulness of a claim before or as it is presented.