Definition of "twattle"
twattle1
verb
third-person singular simple present twattles, present participle twattling, simple past and past participle twattled
(archaic, transitive, intransitive) To talk in a digressive or long-winded way.
Quotations
Tis very well, Mistress, says he, and are you not a fine Gossiping Lady, do you think, to twattle your Husband thus out of his Life and Fortune?
1692, Roger L’Estrange, “ (please specify the fable number.) (please specify the name of the fable.)”, in Fables, of Æsop and Other Eminent Mythologists: […], London: […] R[ichard] Sare, […]
He now and then twattles a little , as an old gentleman may when lamenting the degeneracy of the evil times on which his gray hairs have fallen; but his Introductions and Notes are always gravely entertaining, and generally learnedly instructive.
1858 January, “Dr. Wordsworth's Greek Testament”, in Bibliotheca sacra: a theological quarterly, volume 15, number 5, page 248
He has no story to tell, it is true, but is eminently readable, for he writes most forcible, idiomatic English, is never dull in his didactics, never twattles, is learned without pedantry, and although the topics treated are so diverse, yet there is a natural consecutiveness from first to last, and no abrupt transition.
1860 May, “Literary Notices: Doctor Oldham at Greystones, and His Talk There”, in The Knickerbocker, volume 55, number 5, page 528
noun
countable and uncountable, plural twattles
Quotations
Continue, if you choose, your twattle against Homœopathy; distort it, misinterpret it, calumniate and deride its author; the unprejudiced legions will soon be able to decide on which side is the truth.
1850 May, “Unjust Personalities”, in The American Journal of Homœopathy, volume 5, number 1, page 11
The lies, twattles, and contrivances about this affair, are innumerable.
1970, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, James Archibald Stuart-Wortley-Mackenzie Wharncliffe (1st Baron), William Moy Thomas, The Letters and Works of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, page 500