discourse
dis|course (discourses discoursing discoursed)
The noun is pronounced /d'ɪskɔːrs/ The verb is pronounced /dɪsk'ɔːrs/
1 [N-UNCOUNT] usu with supp
Discourse is spoken or written communication between people, especially serious discussion of a particular subject.
...a tradition of political discourse.
2 [N-COUNT]
A discourse is a serious talk or piece of writing which is intended to teach or explain something. (FORMAL)
Gates responds with a lengthy discourse on deployment strategy.
3 [VERB] V prep, also V
If someone discourses on something, they talk for a long time about it in a confident way. (FORMAL)
He discoursed for several hours on French and English prose.
4
see also direct discourse, indirect discoursedi|rect dis|course
[N-UNCOUNT]
In grammar, direct discourse is speech which is reported by using the exact words that the speaker used. (mainly AM; in BRIT, usually use direct speech)in|di|rect dis|course
[N-UNCOUNT]
Indirect discourse is the same as indirect speech. (AM)
The noun is pronounced /d'ɪskɔːrs/ The verb is pronounced /dɪsk'ɔːrs/
1 [N-UNCOUNT] usu with supp
Discourse is spoken or written communication between people, especially serious discussion of a particular subject.
...a tradition of political discourse.
2 [N-COUNT]
A discourse is a serious talk or piece of writing which is intended to teach or explain something. (FORMAL)
Gates responds with a lengthy discourse on deployment strategy.
3 [VERB] V prep, also V
If someone discourses on something, they talk for a long time about it in a confident way. (FORMAL)
He discoursed for several hours on French and English prose.
4
see also direct discourse, indirect discoursedi|rect dis|course
[N-UNCOUNT]
In grammar, direct discourse is speech which is reported by using the exact words that the speaker used. (mainly AM; in BRIT, usually use direct speech)in|di|rect dis|course
[N-UNCOUNT]
Indirect discourse is the same as indirect speech. (AM)