Superlative for effectively conveying a thought or feeling
“Stella cradled the toy to her, an expressive look on her face.”
Superlative for full of, or evocative of, expression or emotion
“Listeners prefer the expressive music produced by humans, likely because these performances have the subtle variations typical of human expressiveness.”
Superlative for conveying (a specified quality or idea)
“Of all the journalistic stereotypes regularly committed to celluloid, none has been more expressive of its times than the war correspondent.”
Superlative for effectively expressed or communicated in words
“Baptista delivered an expressive speech in which he called to mind the magnificent work effected by António Ferro.”
Superlative for giving clear and vividly explicit details
Superlative for evoking a keen sense of sadness or regret
Superlative for given to open displays of emotion
Superlative for tending to be fanciful or inventive
Superlative for having great impact or influence
Superlative for concise and meaningful
Superlative for very difficult or impossible to forget
Superlative for involving, or given to, open or heavy displays of emotion
Superlative for having an imaginative or sensitively emotional style of expression
Superlative for given to, or marked by, attention-getting behavior suggestive of stage acting
Superlative for relating to the art or practice of public speaking
Superlative for of descriptions or distinctions based on some quality rather than on some quantity
(archaic, of a person or animal) Superlative for full of life, or strikingly alive
Superlative for of or relating to language
Superlative for referring to, or used in the manner of, a phrase
Superlative for of, or pertaining to, poetry, or the writing of poetry
Superlative for predisposed to seeking or enjoying the company of others
Superlative for having a fullness in sound
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