Humans love talking , we communicate mostly through talking , we share a lough a concern , narrate a story or listen to an anecdote told by someone. We talk to learn , we talk to think out loud and we talk to break ice. We talk to make sense and talk instead of fights. If we have nothing better to do we talk for the fun of it. Some people talk a lot mean very little , some say little but mean a lot. Some just can’t Stop talking these kind of people are called
garrulous
adjective
excessively talkative, esp. on trivial matters : Polonius is portrayed as a foolish, garrulous old man.loquacious
adjective
talkativevoluble
adjective
speaking or spoken incessantly and fluently : she was as voluble as her husband was silent.talkative
adjective
fond of or given to talking : the talkative driver hadn’t stopped chatting.Someone who likes to talk frequently or at length might be described as talkative (: he was the most talkative person I’d ever met).
While talkative implies a readiness to engage in talk, loquacious implies an inclination to talk incessantly or to keep up a constant flow of chatter (: a loquacious woman who never seemed to tire of hearing her own voice).
Glib and voluble pertain to the ease with which someone is able to converse or speak, although voluble may be used in either an approving or a critical sense (: a voluble speaker who was in great demand; a voluble neighbor who could not keep a secret).
Glib is almost always negative, referring to a superficial or slick way of speaking (: the glib manner of a used-car salesperson).Garrulous also has negative overtones, implying a tedious or rambling talkativeness, usually about trivial things(: a garrulous old man who bored everyone with his stories about “the old days”).
And some people use too many words to convey a simple idea cross the words related are
verbose
adjective
using or expressed in more words than are needed : much academic language is obscure and verbose.prolix
adjective
(of speech or writing) using or containing too many words; tediously lengthy : he found the narrative too prolix and discursive.pleonasm
noun
the use of more words than are necessary to convey meaning (e.g., see with one’s eyes), either as a fault of style or for emphasis.
and sometimes a lot is being said but its mostly gas
windy
adjective ( windier , windiest )
1 (of weather, a period of time, or a place) marked by or exposed to strong winds : a very windy day.
• resembling the wind in sound or force : Pratt’s sigh was windy.
2 Brit. suffering from, marked by, or causing an accumulation of gas in the alimentary canal.
• informal using or expressed in many words that sound impressive but mean little : windy speeches.flatulent
adjective
suffering from or marked by an accumulation of gas in the alimentary canal : treat flatulent cows with caustic soda.
• related to or causing this condition : the flatulent effect of beans.
• figurative inflated or pretentious in speech or writing : the days of flatulent oratory are gone.Synoyms for Flatulence for the last meaning : pompousness, pretension, pretentiousness, grandiloquence, bombast, turgidity.
and then there are speakers who say a lot before coming to the point or don’t have a point at all
discursive
adjective
1 digressing from subject to subject : students often write dull, secondhand, discursive prose.
• (of a style of speech or writing) fluent and expansive rather than formulaic or abbreviated : the short story is concentrated, whereas the novel is discursive.circumlocution
noun
the use of many words where fewer would do, esp. in a deliberate attempt to be vague or evasive : his admission came after years of circumlocution | he used a number of poetic circumlocutions.periphrastic
adjective
(of speech or writing) indirect and circumlocutory : the periphrastic nature of legal syntax.
• Grammar (of a case or tense) formed by a combination of words rather than by inflection (such as did go and of the people rather than went and the people’s).circuitous
adjective
(of a route or journey) longer than the most direct way : the canal followed a circuitous route | figurative a circuitous line of reasoning.long-winded
adjective
(of speech or writing) continuing at length and in a tedious way : his good wishes were long-winded but sincere.ramble
verb [ intrans. ]
1 walk for pleasure, typically without a definite route.
• (of a plant) put out long shoots and grow over walls or other plants.
2 talk or write at length in a confused or inconsequential way : he rambled on about his acting career.
and some people like repeating ideas and they use
tautology
noun ( pl. -gies)
the saying of the same thing twice in different words, generally considered to be a fault of style (e.g., they arrived one after the other in succession).
• a phrase or expression in which the same thing is said twice in different words.
• Logic a statement that is true by necessity or by virtue of its logical form.