Wiktionary
n. The ability to produce language in any of a number of different modalities such as speech, sign or writing.
Usage examples of "expressive language".
Sometimes it was no more than mental pictures, and often the expressive language of gestures, postures, and facial expressions with which she was most familiar, but since the young animal tended to respond to the sound of her voice, it encouraged Ayla to vocalize more.
The prisoners, in their expressive language, have named it the “.
I'll say the word in a more expressive language just so there'll be no doubt exactly what it is we're talking about.
Having such a command of expressive language, and so keen a power of minute observation, it is somewhat strange that he should have attempted so little in the way of description.
He sat leaning forward, listening, or answering with a spate of the clear, expressive language that was his native tongue, sometimes gesturing with his free hand as if his interlocutor could see him, occasionally laughing.
Starved of expressive language as we scientists are, at our moment of greatest need we reach for a symbolic cloak, and sacrifice our experimental subjects.