to be verbose

listen to the pronunciation of to be verbose
English - English
verbalize
verbose
Producing unusually detailed output for diagnostic purposes

You should use verbose logging sparingly. Turning on verbose logging for every process would result in log files so large they would become useless.

verbose
Abounding in words, containing more words than necessary. Long winded, or windy

Even the most jingoistic of native-speakers of Spanish admit their language is verbose; compared to what can be said in a sentence in English, it sometimes takes a paragraph of explanation in Spanish to say the same thing.

verbose
wordy
verbose
prolix
verbose
{s} wordy, long-winded, containing more words than necessary
verbose
Using more words than are needed
verbose
disapproval If you describe a person or a piece of writing as verbose, you are critical of them because they use more words than are necessary, and so make you feel bored or annoyed. verbose politicians His writing is difficult and often verbose. = long-winded. using or containing too many words
verbose
{a} full of words, prolix, tedious, long
verbose
Wordy; use of more words that strictly necessaryo
verbose
Forum format which displays the entire text of each post in the message board
verbose
Of or pertaining to languages that take longer to speak than other languages
verbose
using or containing too many words; "long-winded (or windy) speakers"; "verbose and ineffective instructional methods"; "newspapers of the day printed long wordy editorials"; "proceedings were delayed by wordy disputes"
verbose
A modem that displays commands and prompts in full
verbose
Boolean property indicating whether TraceEngine should echo initialisation traces to System err false
verbose
Abounding in words; using or containing more words than are necessary; tedious by a multiplicity of words; prolix; wordy; as, a verbose speaker; a verbose argument
to be verbose
Favorites