into conversation
11Conversation poems — Samuel Taylor Coleridge portrayed by Washington Allston in 1814 The conversation poems are a group of eight poems composed by Samuel Taylor Coleridge …
12Conversation — This article is about human communication. For other uses, see Conversation (disambiguation). Banter redirects here. For the BBC radio show, see Banter (radio show). Arnold Lakhovsky, The Conversation (circa 1935) …
13Conversation (album) — This article is about the Twinz album. For other albums with similar titles, see Conversation (disambiguation). Conversation Studio album by Twinz …
14conversation — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Social talk Nouns 1. conversation, interlocution, intercourse; collocution, colloquy, converse, discussion, talkfest; confabulation; talk, discourse, social intercourse; oral communication, communion,… …
15conversation — con|ver|sa|tion W2S1 [ˌkɔnvəˈseıʃən US ˌka:nvər ] n [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: Latin conversatio, from conversari; CONVERSE1] [U and C] an informal talk in which people exchange news, feelings, and thoughts ▪ a telephone conversation …
16Conversation piece — For other uses, see Conversation Piece (disambiguation). A conversation piece by Arthur Devis …
17Conversation opener — A conversation opener is an introduction used to begin a conversation. They are frequently the subject of guides and seminars on how to make friends and/or meet people. Different situations may call for different openers (e.g. approaching a… …
18Conversation Piece (film) — Gruppo di famiglia in un interno UK DVD cover Directed by Luchino Visconti Produced by Giovanni Bertolucci for Rusconi Film …
19Into the Labyrinth (novel) — infobox Book | name = Into the Labyrinth title orig = translator = image caption = Cover image of Into the Labyrinth author = Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman illustrator = cover artist = country = United States language = English series = The… …
20conversation — [14] Latin convertere meant ‘turn round, transform’. It was a compound verb formed from the intensive prefix com and vertere ‘turn’ (source of English verse, version, and vertigo). It has spawned a variety of English words, its most direct… …