sportswriters guarded their verbiage so jealously R. A. Sokolov
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Verbiage descends from French verbier, meaning "to trill" or "to warble." The usual sense of the word implies an overabundance of possibly unnecessary words, much like the word wordiness. In other words, a writer with a fondness for verbiage might be accused of "wordiness." Some people think the phrase "excess verbiage" is redundant, but that's not necessarily true. Verbiage has a second sense meaning, simply, "wording," with no suggestion of excess. This second definition has sometimes been treated as an error by people who insist that verbiage must always imply excessiveness, but that sense is well-established and can be considered standard.
NOT the least of the many trials inflicted upon the Boston Red Sox has been a torrent of verbiage. Surely no team in recent memory has been so scrutinized, complained about and then elegized. Charles McGrath, New York Times Book Review, 13 Aug. 2006Fashionable courtiers in the Renaissance adopted the doublet. … The cotton padding of this jacket, called bombast (the source of the term for inflated verbiage), was gradually increased to give courtiers the pumped-up look. John Tierney, New York Times, 21 Jan. 1999To find the height of arcane verbiage look no farther than Rule 10 of the rules governing Major League Baseball, in what is known as the Blue Book. The corresponding entry explains the waivers system—the procedures that pertain to certain player transactions—in a way that makes the Magna Carta look like part of the Jackie Collins oeuvre. Tom Verducci, Sports Illustrated, 25 Aug. 1997Sure, some contract verbiage is so objectionable, it can be considered against public policy; in fact, the most arduous hold-harmless clauses would probably be thrown out of court. Leon H. Ciesla, Plane & Pilot, March 1995Is word processing truly the wonder it seems or will it turn out to be but a mere exercise in verbose verbiage? Erik Sandberg-Diment, New York Times, 26 June 1984 The editor removed some of the excess verbiage from the article. teachers loathe the verbiage that students resort to in order to pad a paper See More
Recent Examples on the WebSome of these vignettes function like relatively conventional short stories, while others are single-page explosions of decontextualized verbiage. Aaron Timms, The New Republic, 2 Sep. 2022 Perhaps the fieriest critic of the streaming services is David Israelite, president and CEO of the NMPA, whose aggressive tactics and verbiage were on full display at the trade organization’s annual meeting in June. Jem Aswad, Variety, 28 July 2022 The trustees relooked at the policy late last month and voted to keep the verbiage the same. Samantha Chery, Washington Post, 23 June 2022 Title IX is a law, yes, but there are women’s personal stories intertwined with the verbiage whose lives depended on it. Jordan Ligons, Essence, 21 June 2022 If anyone is observed by multiple people saying what could be perceived as racial, anti-Semitic, derogatory or intimidating verbiage or displaying such a symbol, they will be asked to leave the event.cleveland, 23 May 2022 One of the most obvious problems is that it is written in very arcane, convoluted, nineteenth-century verbiage. Isaac Chotiner, The New Yorker, 27 June 2022 However, even with the fines and the bans on blatant usage of verbiage that advertises skin lightening, the products are still being sold around the globe, peddled by celebrities like Blac Chyna and Dencia. Ineye Komonibo, refinery29.com, 30 May 2022 The former Chicago White Sox player and manager — and current NBC Sports Chicago analyst — once again has been accused of excessive verbiage, this time by Sox shortstop Tim Anderson. Paul Sullivan, Chicago Tribune, 18 May 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from French, from verbier "to trill, warble" (going back to Middle French verboier "to twitter," altered from Middle French dialect (Picard) verbloier, guerbloier, derivative of werbler "to sing expressively, trill") + -age-age — more at warble entry 1
Note: The meaning of French verbiage clearly shows the associative influence of verbe "word, verb" and its derivatives.