Babble and ramble are both derogatory when applied to speech or writing; but beyond that they have very little in common.
The primary sense of babble has to do with >sound<: as your dictionary tells you, it characterizes speech as “rapid and continuous”, so much so that no coherent meaning can be discerned. We use babble to speak of babies’ meaningless syllables, of mindless social chatter, of fluent but uninformed speech, and of speech in foreign languages which we do not understand. We also use the term figuratively of rapidly flowing streams: ‘babbling brooks’.
The primary sense of ramble has to do with >direction<. It was used originally of walking or travel: to wander aimlessly, going nowhere in particular. When ramble is used of speech or writing it indicates that a discourse is similarly directionless: it jumps from one point to another, with no apparent connection and no evident point towards which it is driving.
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Incidentally, you’re very unlikely to hear or read “He is babbling in his speech.” Since you’re talking about a person, it would be taken for granted that it his speech which is involved; we‘d just say “He’s babbling.”
“He is rambling in his speech” is unlikely, too; more usual expressions are:
“He’s rambling”, to describe what he’s saying now as incoherent
“He rambles”, to describe his customary speaking style as incoherent
“His speech rambled” to describe the lecture or speech he gave on a specific occasion as incoherent
“His speech is/was rambling”, to suggest that his manner of speaking is/was symptomatic of inebriation or disease
It means individually sold cigarettes which have been taken out of their pack.
Where I'm from, and I think in much of the US, they sometimes go by looseys and it is illegal to sell them. Some little shops do anyway.
Best Answer
"Small change" can refer to coins of low value, or to paper money of low value, or metaphorically to anything of low relative worth; a couple of $50 bills is "small change" to someone looking for a $200,000 payment, for example.
"Loose change" specifically refers to all of the coins that you happen to have in your pockets or purse that are not rolled or bundled up; if you got two quarters back from a purchase and just dropped them into your front pocket, for example, that's loose change. If you put the quarters into a sleeve for making a "roll of quarters", then they aren't loose anymore. (In a coin purse or a wallet pouch, they're probably still able to rattle about and make noise, which is a key element of being considered "loose", I think.)