Converse in a sentence as a noun

" "we all talk, but we never converse!

After looking for a new job recently, I realized the converse is also true.

I converse with knowledgable people on usenet and irc.

The converse -- what skills does a programmer who has never left academia lack?

I am assuming they weren't talking loudly but rather meant to converse between each other.

Converse in a sentence as a verb

The converse is that everyone starts out going as fast as they canAs far as I can see, nobody is recommending that.

The converse is true too: all those other researchers should be finding ways to collaborate with Hofstadter.

What has changed is actually the converse: automation has become so good that we expect it to be flawless.

I had to deal with the converse of the problem when I was working for a company that ran the vehicle smog checking for the state of Illinois.

I remember watching some cartoon where some aliens are watching humans converse and they interrupt by saying "ritual gum flapping time is over".

Converse in a sentence as an adjective

I sometimes ask mental health professionals what the converse of Oppositional Defiant Disorder is.

I lost count early of the number of different native language pairings I would see among foreign students in Taiwan--mostly in Taiwan to learn Chinese--who would converse with one another in English, because English was their strongest language in common.

But sometimes one is dominant, and if the gray beast gets its teeth all the way into you, it takes away not just positive feelings but everything until you're just a walking shell so empty you can't even fully comprehend what you've lost.> The converse, when the black beast has you, can be much like you describe - you can still feel a kind of dreadful, frenzied joy in short moments as you cling desperately to the edge of the sucking dark hole in yourself, trying to ignore the beast's whispers that any pleasure is a lie that will just make the coming pain more stark and inescapable and utterly deserved.> They're liars, but they're good at it.

Converse definitions

noun

a proposition obtained by conversion

verb

carry on a conversation

See also: discourse

adjective

of words so related that one reverses the relation denoted by the other; "`parental' and `filial' are converse terms"

adjective

turned about in order or relation; "transposed letters"

See also: reversed transposed