|
OPPOSITE |
Converse |
|
INTERACT |
Converse (with) |
|
CHAT |
Converse (with) |
|
STEP |
Converse (with) |
|
|
CONVERSED |
Of Converse |
|
INTERTALK |
To converse. |
|
CONVERSING |
Of Converse |
|
PROPOSE |
To speak; to converse. |
|
|
CONVERSIVE |
Ready to converse; social. |
|
REASON |
To converse; to compare opinions. |
|
PARLE |
To talk; to converse; to parley. |
|
QUESTION |
To argue; to converse; to dispute. |
|
COMMON |
To converse together; to discourse; to confer. |
|
SPEAK |
To express opinions; to say; to talk; to converse. |
|
DISCOURSIVE |
Inclined to converse; conversable; communicative; as,
a discoursive man. |
|
CONVERSABLENESS |
The quality of being conversable; disposition to
converse; sociability. |
|
CONVERSABLE |
Qualified for conversation; disposed to converse;
sociable; free in discourse. |
|
CONVERSELY |
In a converse manner; with change of order or
relation; reciprocally. |
|
CONVERSE |
Turned about; reversed in order or relation; reciprocal;
as, a converse proposition. |
|
TACITURN |
Habitually silent; not given to converse; not apt to talk
or speak. |
|
SSOCIABLE |
Ready to converse; inclined to talk with others; not
taciturn or reserved. |
|
FACILE |
Easy of access or converse; mild; courteous; not haughty,
austere, or distant; affable; complaisant. |
|
SOCIAL |
Ready or disposed to mix in friendly converse;
companionable; sociable; as, a social person. |
|
COMMUNE |
To converse together with sympathy and confidence; to
interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel. |
|
WHISPER |
To speak with suspicion, or timorous caution; to converse
in whispers, as in secret plotting. |