Home › Words › L › loquiturloquiturloquitur means speaks.EtymologyBorrowed from Latin loquitur (literally “[he/she] speaks”), from loquor.verbSpeaks.e.g.“R.D. loquitur: Clarice has omitted to tell you that she looked exceedingly pretty at dinner, and made a conquest by which she has bound herself to learn the Greek alphabet.” — 1915, Virginia Woolf, chapter III, in The Voyage Out, London: Duckworth & Co., […], →OCLC, page 54:Definitions & examples from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).Words closest in meaningBy meaning, not spelling — each word's AI semantic fingerprint, nearest first.locutor 55% match — A speaker (one who talks). vs loquitur →alloquy 53% match — Act of speaking to another; an address to another person. vs loquitur →locute 53% match — To speak; to say; to utter. vs loquitur →speakingly 53% match — In an expressive manner. vs loquitur →coverbal 51% match — Accompanying speech. vs loquitur →dixi 51% match — An utterance signifying the end of a speech. vs loquitur →endspeech 51% match — An epilogue. vs loquitur →disert 50% match — Eloquent. vs loquitur →