Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
To talk to a child is like talking to oneself.
"One gets tired of talking to oneself or to the robots."
Twitter can also, of course, be used for talking to oneself in public - an activity that works much better online than off.
Being alone one tends to talk to oneself a lot, but twice as much to visitors like yourself.
Talking to oneself got exceedingly boring after several weeks. '
It would even have seemed slightly unorthodox, a dangerous eccentricity, like talking to oneself.
"Isn't talking to oneself the first sign of dementia?"
That's one type of talking to oneself.
Talking to oneself is a bad habit.
The time when there should be concern is when talking to oneself occurs outside of socially acceptable situations.
Joseph Jordania suggested that talking to oneself can be used to avoid silence.
Somehow, to her mother, talking to a cat was less harmful to one's sanity than talking to oneself.
Often used when talking to oneself.
Seems silly to talk to oneself, she thinks, so she invents someone to talk to.
Wat is the difference, specifically, between praying & talking to oneself?
Also silently-it did not seem so bad to talk to oneself, as long as it was not aloud-he defended himself.
Ad Auditory digital: Talking to oneself.
According to Jordania, talking to oneself is only one of the ways to fill in prolonged gaps of silence in humans.
"But I can't - I'm talking a sort of nonsense - the sort of nonsense one talks to oneself."
Sometimes it is like telling another person something, sometimes it is like talking to oneself, sometimes simply like knowing.
Unfortunately, "How I Pray" is almost entirely lacking in suspicion, in the nagging fear that in talking to God one is really talking to oneself.
The second person ta is often used when talking to oneself as in a soliloquy, but also indicates a higher status of the speaker (such as that of a high official, etc.).
He'd found over the course of a long acquaintance that when one has nobody but Sir Turquine for company, quite often talking to oneself is the only way to get an intelligent conversation.
Honeycutt and his colleagues (1989) proposed that IIs are actually an extended form of intrapersonal communication, which allows one to talk to oneself and imagine talking to others as well.
In writing on the subject of "Soliloquies in Drama," Max Beerbohm said that "talking to oneself" has a drawback: "It is supposed to be one of the early symptoms of insanity."