The AI-powered English dictionary
countable and uncountable, plural wordages
Words collectively. examples
The excessive use of words; verbiage. quotations examples
But the plates are good, and, in reality, sufficient without all the wordage.
1829 April, "Article VIII" (review of The Cause of Dry Rot Discovered), The Westminster Review, p. 417 (Google books view)
Here, I think, we must class the portmanteau-wordage of James Joyce, in which the use of verbal and syllabic association is carried so far that its power of unconscious persuasion is lost and the reader’s response is diverted by a conscious ecstasy of enigma-hunting, like a pig rooting for truffles.
1941, Dorothy L. Sayers, chapter 10, in The Mind of the Maker, London: Methuen, page 122
The number of words used in a text. quotations examples
The official transcript totaled 2,045,000 words—more than twice the wordage of the Bible.
1951 July 2, “MacArthur Hearing: Curtain”, in Time, retrieved 21 April 2015
A work of elucidation couched in a lazily dense style; a biography seemingly concerned with externals but in fact spun from inside the biographer like a spider’s thread; a critical study which exceeds in wordage all the major works of its subject put together…
2002, Julian Barnes, “Flaubert’s Death-Masks”, in Something to Declare, New York: Knopf
The choice of words used; phraseology. quotations examples
"With the wordage in the contract, we think we have a good case."
1990 May 15, Jack Curry, “Winfield Case Heads to Arbitrator”, in New York Times, retrieved 21 April 2015