She talked of her happy love, she talked of her father; she related her mother's revelations on her death-bed, and the obligations that mother had laid upon her.
She talked much of religion, and had it not at heart, though she was prepared to find in it a solution of her life.
She talked about a fountain of pure water down where now wuz filth too horrible to mention.
She talked very wild--for she talked about them terrible slantin' old housen bein' torn down to make room for this Paradise of the future.
She went on talking; she talked, it seemed to both the young men, to some one outside, up in the air.
She talked, but her remarks were indifferent, and when he spoke her attention seemed to wander.
But if she talked to any one, the conception might escape her.
So she talkedof herself, of her life at Buyukderer in the summer, and in Pera in the autumn and spring.
She talked well, she was witty without being ill-natured, and she described all that had happened in the little town since Elizabeth's wedding-day with a subdued and charming mimicry that made the room ring with laughter.
She talked at Denas in talking to the other girls, and the girls all echoed and shadowed their mistress' opinions and conduct.
But as she talked so earnestly to him of righteousness, and duty and the life to come, it was impossible that he should not in some way respond.
She swung the door open as she talked, took the jug from Eileen's hand, and poured the milk into a jug of her own that stood on the dresser.
She scratched the little pig's back with one hand as she talked.
She stooped over and put a bit of peat on the fire, and because she had no one else to talk to, she talked to the tea-kettle.
She touched his hand kindly and sat close beside him as she talked.
She talked to him while she drew the curtains, but he did not answer; he had remembered at once that this was the morning for the miracle.
She talked glibly of anatomy and construction, planes and lines, and of much else which Philip did not understand.
She talked breathlessly of the floor and the heat and the supper.
For the first time in her life her tongue was loosened; she talked floods of nonsense, happy, enchanted nonsense.
And so she talked to him, and as she talked his quick mind gained an impression of her going about sordid ways and small woman tasks in knightly armour.
She talked to him of Lashnagar, pouring into his ears legend after legend of her people, until she came to the tale of the spaewife and the coming of the ruin upon Lashnagar.
One day when the doctor was sitting beside her and she had got out of a maze of pain into a buoyant sea of bodily unconsciousness, she talked to him about his letter in which he had grieved at his inadequacy.
She talked as she arranged the dishes, and occasionally she would hold a piece of crockery suspended in the air as she emphasised her words.
She talked rapidly, but with a certain deliberation of manner which gave a quaint interest to everything she said.
If she talked, he talked; if she was silent, he said nothing.
But she persevered obstinately, and as the muddy water squelched through her broken shoes and the wind seemed trying to drag her thin jacket from her, she talked to herself as she walked, though she did not speak aloud or even move her lips.
She seemed to see it as she talked, and she grew cheered and warmed as she spoke.
She felt like an ignorant child, and almost preposterously English, as she talked to Madame Sennier, who became voluble in reply.
She talked for a little while, sufficiently mistress of herself to charm Jonson Ramer.
As she talked to Paul Lane, whom she had known pretty well for years, and liked as much as she could ever like him, she was secretly intent on the new note.
She talked as if convincing and consoling herself, and there was an accent of loneliness in it all that pierced Lemuel's preoccupation; he had hardly noted how almost pathetically glad she was to see him.
She talked to Lemuel, and asked him if he had read a book he glanced at on the table, and seemed willing to make him feel at ease.
She talked of the cabmen of Naples and the beggars of Amalfi.
She talked to him freely and simply of her husband and of the journey the two men had taken together.
She talked to me of Scotland, and perhaps I noticed in her a tendency to enlarge on the sumptuousness of her establishment there.
She talked to him in the baby language of her own country.
She talked to me of the various things which they talk of to the stranger in Samoa, of the journey, and whether I had slid down the water rock at Papaseea, and if I meant to stay in a native village.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "she talked" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.