Why the answer is C, and why the others tempt you.
## The reasoning
**Laconic** means using very few words — brief and to the point. Think of someone who responds "Yes" or "No" without elaboration. The antonym (opposite) of laconic would be someone who uses *many* words, talks excessively, or goes into long-winded explanations. That's exactly what **verbose** means — wordy and lengthy in speech or writing.
## Why the wrong options tempt you
**A) Brief** and **B) Concise** are actually *synonyms* (similar words) to laconic, not antonyms. They all mean short and direct. The trap here is forgetting to look for the *opposite*.
**D) Quiet** might seem opposite because quiet people often speak less, but quiet refers to *volume* or *silence*, not word count. A quiet person can still be verbose when they do speak!
## Quick takeaway
**Laconic = few words; Verbose = many words** — remember: a verbose person is the opposite of a laconic one; they love long explanations while laconic speakers keep it minimal.
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