2

Kind of like:

  • not good at expressing oneself
6
  • Have you looked in a thesaurus or a dictionary for antonyms to verbose? reticent or diffident, for example? There are many words for not expressing. Without a bit more context, it's hard to guess which one is best. Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 4:26
  • Socially inept?
    – Mou某
    Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 5:08
  • 1
    Emo... I kid, i kid.
    – Adsy
    Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 10:01
  • It depends quite a lot on the reason for the behaviour: If the person is not verbose because they choose not to talk, they are taciturn, reticent or reserved; if it is because they are not good at talking, they are inarticulate or poorly spoken. (Though you would only know such when they do talk!)
    – Sam
    Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 12:00
  • Is "in person" the critical point? As in, they can write words and thoughts, and adequately convey their emotions in writing; but get all flustered and tongue-tied trying to do it face to face (or in front of a group)?
    – Phil Perry
    Commented Jun 16, 2014 at 15:05

12 Answers 12

9

Well, "not good at expressing oneself" sounds like "inarticulate." "Not verbose" sounds like "quiet," or perhaps "reticent."

5

Timid seems like a good option here, since you seen to be indicating that in-person is key.

I think that perhaps taciturn could work even better.

5

"Tongue-tied" might describe that red-faced, ear-ringing, throbbing jugular panic that accompanies sudden speechlessness in the moment of truth.

1

I think reticent may give the idea:

Inclined to keep one's thoughts, feelings, and personal affairs to oneself.

1

There's no single word I can think of.

However, the usual expression is poor verbal communication skills (a mouthful, but that's what it is.)

See Verbal Communication on selfgrowth and Communication Skills on WP.

0

Cerebrotonic Designating a personality type characterised as intellectual, introverted, and emotionally restrained.

Reserved: formal or self-restrained in manner and relationship; avoiding familiarity or intimacy with others: a quiet, reserved man. 4. characterized by reserve, as the disposition, manner, etc.: reserved comments.

0
0

I found a reference once to Alexithymia in a biographical work and was intrigued by the concept. Wikipedia says: "a personality construct characterized by the sub-clinical inability to identify and describe emotions in the self".

After doing some research, it is actually a specific medical term used for clinical diagnosis: A person who might appear as an automaton in both personal and social situations. However, in the biographical work I was reading, it was used much more loosely. For example, men raised in broken families, perhaps in inner-city, survival-of-the-fittest environments, will have trouble later in life showing emotion, forming attachments and expressing love, and the author uses the word "alexithymia" in this context.

0

Reserved would be a good option when the person chooses to keep her/his thoughts to herself/himself.

0

Stilted also a possibility:

(Of a manner of talking or writing) stiff and self-conscious or unnatural

0

wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=dyslogia

see the word dyslogia- impaired ability to express ideas verbally.

for inability to express thoughts in written, consider agraphia.

if this doesn't satisfy you then choose the answer voted most.

0

Verbally (conversationally) challenged.

A euphemism is "visual learner".

0

How about "ineloquent," lacking eloquence?

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