adverb
In a fluent or persuasive manner.
‘commentators have spoken eloquently on both sides of the issue’
- ‘Professor Hobby eloquently explains his position at the start of the film.’
- ‘However, perhaps because of their maturity, the characters talk frequently and eloquently about their circumstances.’
- ‘One image in the series eloquently conveys this movement.’
- ‘I first saw this suggestion very eloquently expressed in a short column by Roger Ebert.’
- ‘As she so eloquently writes, ancient Mesopotamian sites and artifacts are part of the fabric of her earliest memories.’
- ‘But his eloquently argued position that film-makers have a social responsibility also strikes a chord with me.’
- ‘I'm sure he phrased it rather more eloquently.’
- ‘It is also eloquently plotted, so we understand the situations and dramatics instantly and inherently.’
- ‘He eloquently argued that we thus have a moral imperative to think and act globally, whatever our personal specialties might be.’
- ‘Malcolm X was eloquently militant, sophisticated, and his speeches finely crafted.’