Verbal Diarrhea Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Verbal Diarrhea. Here they are! All 15 of them:

... We're just different." "Yeah," I say. "I'm mute and you have verbal diarrhea.
Janet Gurtler (I'm Not Her)
A person who gossips & talks too much may not suffer from Bipolar Disorder but may suffer from Verbal Diarrhea.:)
Timothy Pina
Oh, I bet you’d find that marvelous; all of us helpless women just smiling and nodding. Though I’m afraid it would never work on me.” “Of course not,” he deadpans. “I’m stuck next to the one afflicted with an apparently incurable case of verbal diarrhea.” “Says the man who is socially constipated.
Kristen Callihan (Managed (VIP, #2))
Enough of this. Does every conversation with you have to be the director's cut? Get out of the car.
Jonathan Lethem (Motherless Brooklyn)
What the fuck was wrong with me, I wondered. I wished there was a version of Pepto Bismol for verbal diarrhea, because I'd invest in it. My
Mariana Zapata (Lingus)
He shuts up just one time after nearly a month of the verbal diarrhea.
Rick Yancey (The Infinite Sea (The 5th Wave, #2))
There ain’t many people out there who have my respect. Respect needs to be earned. Preppy’s got mine. The man might have a case of verbal diarrhea there ain’t no cure for, but he’s been through hell and back. He’s been tortured and brutalized the likes of which most folks can’t begin to imagine. Most men, the strongest of men, in both body and spirit would’ve caved after that. Not Preppy. Not Samuel Motherfucking Clearwater.
T.M. Frazier (Up in Smoke (King, #8))
Books used to be written by humanity's greatest thinkers, or at least our greatest entertainers. Now every halfwit can publish his verbal diarrhea. And millions of shitty, mediocre, uninspired, trite books are drowning out mankind's greatest literary accomplishments.
Oliver Markus Malloy (The Ugly Truth About Self-Publishing: Not another cookie-cutter contemporary romance (On Writing and Self-Publishing a Book, #2))
The Place Faidherbe had the characteristic atmosphere, the overdone décor, the floral and verbal excess, of a subprefecture in southern France gone mad. The ten cars left the Place Faidherbe only to come back five minutes later, having once more completed the same circuit with their cargo of anemic Europeans, dressed in unbleached linen, fragile creatures as wobbly as melting sherbet. For weeks and years these colonials passed the same forms and faces until they were so sick of hating them that they didn’t even look at one another. The officers now and then would take their families out for a walk, paying close attention to military salutes and civilian greetings, the wives swaddled in their special sanitary napkins, the children, unbearably plump European maggots, wilted by the heat and constant diarrhea. To command, you need more than a kepi; you also need troops. In the climate of Fort-Gono the European cadres melted faster than butter. A battalion was like a lump of sugar in your coffee; the longer you looked the less you saw. Most of the white conscripts were permanently in the hospital, sleeping off their malaria, riddled with parasites made to order fo every nook and cranny of the body, whole squads stretched out flat between cigarettes and flies, masturbating under moldy sheets, spinning endless yarns between fits of painstakingly provoked and coddled fever.
Louis-Ferdinand Céline (Journey to the End of the Night)
So many of them overshared to the point of verbal diarrhea.
Marie Force (Light After Dark (Gansett Island, #16))
Imagine if you had to buy beautiful words before you could use them. Some people with verbal diarrhea would soon be broke.
Nina George (The Little Paris Bookshop)
This verbal diarrhea was idiotic.
Johnny B. Truant (Fat Vampire (Fat Vampire, #1))
The government has verbal diarrhea- if there's a war, they'll end up talking the enemy to death.
David Downing (Diary of a Dead Man on Leave)
And just now, I’ve chosen to trust someone who named his daughters after fucking pop stars and whose son is the youngest on record to be on the FBI watch list. There ain’t many people out there who have my respect. Respect needs to be earned. Preppy’s got mine. The man might have a case of verbal diarrhea there ain’t no cure for, but he’s been through hell and back. He’s been tortured and brutalized the likes of which most folks can’t begin to imagine. Most men, the strongest of men, in both body and spirit, would’ve caved after that. Not Preppy. Not Samuel Motherfucking Clearwater.
T.M. Frazier (Up in Smoke (King, #8))
The Man Who Taught Chavez How to Organize,” finds Ross training a group of volunteers in Sacramento, where he goes over the finer points of handing out pro–Prop 14 bumper stickers: make the pitch to passersby in nine seconds, deal with any questions in forty-five seconds, and move along, avoiding what Ross calls “verbal diarrhea,” which a farmworker volunteer likens to a worker staying on a grape vine too long.
Gabriel Thompson (America's Social Arsonist: Fred Ross and Grassroots Organizing in the Twentieth Century)