Gabbler vs Gabbles - What's the difference?
gabbler | gabbles |
(gabble)
To talk fast, idly, foolishly, or without meaning.
* 1611 , William Shakespeare, The Tempest , Act I, scene II :
* 1900 , , The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg , ch. 4:
* 2013 , . Melbourne, Australia: The Text Publishing Company. chapter 16. p. 144.
To utter inarticulate sounds with rapidity.
As a noun gabbler
is one who gabbles, or prates loquaciously on a trifling subject.As a verb gabbles is
(gabble).gabbler
English
Usage notes
Note the differences implied between gabblers and other prattlers in translation of The Arabian Nights (at the end of the tailor's tale).Synonyms
* chatterer * jabbererReferences
* (Note the somewhat different definition.) * * Oxford English Dictionary , 2nd ed., 1989.Anagrams
*gabbles
English
Verb
(head)gabble
English
Verb
(en-verb)- I pitied thee, took pains to make thee speak, taught thee each hour one thing or other; when thou didst not, savage, know thine own meaning, but wouldst gabble like a thing most brutish
- Then he fell to gabbling strange and dreadful things which were not clearly understandable.
- Does she regard him simply as a workman come to do a job for her, someone whom she need never lay eyes on again; or is she gabbling to hide discomfiture?
- gabbling fowls
- (Dryden)