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by snowcrashover 2496 days ago
Good profile. I feel like the author was having a lot of fun with his thesaurus:

"He has a lifelong habit of collecting garrulous friends and yet a tendency to induce some measure of taciturnity in all but the most voluble of them. His style of reticence is contagious."

2 comments

Every time I read a New Yorker article I feel like that. Here are four words I don't know in just the first paragraph: garrulous, taciturnity, voluble, reticence.
Really? Those words seem perfectly cromulent to me
haha, I guess I'm around a lot of bookish & verbal friends. That sentence didn't strike me as odd in the slightest.
I'd suggest that it's not so much the particular words, it's that all the "oddball" words in the sentence are directly Latin-derived -- garrulous, taciturnity, voluble, reticence. This is what gives the sentence a somewhat forced tone - perhaps a good Anglo-Saxon term might provide a punch.

Probably the stock phrases, "collecting friends", "some measure of X", "all but the most", "style is contagious", don't help either.

The quoted words don't seem that well-crafted, but the content of the observation serves as a good character sketch.

Your friends are probably very garrulous. :)