Better words for

talk

Talk” does the job — but the right alternative does more. Here are 6 curated replacements, each with a definition, pronunciation, and an example of it working on the page.

discourse

/ˈdɪs-kɔːrs/Elevated

To speak or write formally and at length on a subject.

She discoursed eloquently on the collapse of empires until the candles burned low.

Best for: Works well in academic, philosophical, or formal narrative settings.

parley

/ˈpɑːr-li/Literary

To hold a conference or discussion, especially between opposing parties.

The two generals agreed to parley at dawn before the first shot was fired.

Best for: Ideal for historical fiction, conflict negotiation, or dramatic dialogue scenes.

jaw

/dʒɔː/Punchy

To talk at length, especially in a chatty or idle way.

They sat on the porch for hours, jawing about nothing and everything.

Best for: Casual, regional American vernacular — great for grounded, earthy characters.

colloquize

/ˈkɒl-ə-kwʌɪz/Rare Gem

To engage in familiar or informal conversation.

The old professors colloquized late into the evening, forgetting the cold entirely.

Best for: Rare academic register; effective in ironic or deliberately formal prose.

expatiate

/ɪk-ˈspeɪ-ʃi-eɪt/Elevated

To speak or write at great length and in elaborate detail.

He expatiates on every minor grievance until his listeners quietly disappear.

Best for: Best used to signal verbosity or passionate depth; suits essays and satire.

confabulate

/kən-ˈfæb-jʊ-leɪt/Rare Gem

To chat informally and spontaneously, as if filling in gaps with lively invention.

The twins confabulated in their own invented language, baffling everyone around them.

Best for: Rare and slightly clinical in origin, but strikingly vivid in literary or quirky contexts.

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