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Language quote from classy quote

Try to understand how they feel - put yourselves in their place. Imagine you are in a foreign country with no money, possessions or friends. You cannot speak the language; the culture is completely different to your normal environment; isolated and helpless. You would be dependent on someone supporting you. Think of that when you next meet someone who is autistic...

~ Michael Braccia

Michael Braccia Autism Autistic Isolated Isolation Language

Language is very tough, though, a tenacity that is backed up by a long history. However it is treated, its autonomy cannot be lost or seriously damaged, even if that treatment is rather rough. It is the inherent right of all writers to experiment with the possibilities of language in every way they can imagine—without that adventurous spirit, nothing new can ever be born.

~ Haruki Murakami

Haruki Murakami Language Writing

Adam was charming and spoke perfect French. Like many anglophones in Montréal, he actually spoke French better than we did. They knew exactly which verbs to use in the same way that people knew which utensils to use while eating at a fancy dinner. It was very proper because they learned it from books. They didn’t know slang or how to curse. They didn’t know how to do anything other than be proper and reserved. It was state-sponsored, dry-clean-only French.

~ Heather O'neill

Heather O'neill French Language

He talking Louisiana, you speaking Tennessee. The music so different, the sound coming from a different part of the body. It must of been like hearing lyrics set to scores by two different composers. But when you made love he must of have said I love you and you understood that and it was true, too, because I have seen the desperation in his eyes ever since—no matter what business venture he thinks up.

~ Toni Morrison

Toni Morrison Language Love

As the language areas of the left hemisphere enter their sensitive period during the middle of the second year of life, grammatical language in the left integrates with the interpersonal and prosodic elements of communication already well developed in the right. As the cortical language centers mature, words are joined together to make sentences and can be used to express increasingly complex ideas flavored with emotion. As the frontal cortex continues to expand and connect with more neural networks, memory improves and a sense of time slowly emerges and autobiographical memory begins to connect the self with places and events, within and across time. The emerging narratives begin to organize the nascent sense of self and become the bedrock of our sense of self in interpersonal and physical space

~ Louis Cozolino

Louis Cozolino Language Narrative Neuroscience

...if we were to associate the genius of a place with one particular thing – the Russians with literature, say, or the Germans with music, the Dutch and Spanish with painting – we would have to say that the true genius of Ancient India was language.

~ Aatish Taseer

Aatish Taseer India Language Sanskrit

The human impulse behind the isolation of class is as basic as impulses get: People like to be around other people who understand them and to whom they can talk.

~ Charles Murray

Charles Murray Assumptions Culture Language Socioeconomic Status

The linguistic system represented in the mind-brain gives some account of everything submitted to it: good sentences, bad sentences, sentences in other languages, ums and ahs, coughs; perhaps -Chomsky suggests- even to non-linguistic events like a squeaking door.

~ Neilson Voyne Smith

Neilson Voyne Smith Language Linguistics

I want to hear you wound my lovely language with your rough barbarian tongue.

~ Patrick Rothfuss

Patrick Rothfuss Eloquence Language Speaking

it had been briefed that when Culture people didn’t speak Marain for a long time and did speak another language, they were liable to change; they acted differently, they started to think in that other language, they lost the carefully balanced interpretative structure of the Culture language, left its subtle shifts of cadence, tone and rhythm behind for, in virtually every case, something much cruder.

~ Iain M. Banks

Iain M. Banks Language

We need a language that brings us together about the deepest things we care about rather than pushing us apart.

~ Joseph Jaworski

Joseph Jaworski Language

How is it that you can read this book? An obvious answer is because you know English. An equally obvious answer is because the light is on. These two explanations for an apparently trivial ability can illuminate a fundamental dichotomy: the difference between our knowledge of language and our use of that knowledge; between our competence and our performance. Your knowledge of grammar and vocabulary of English, your competence as a speaker of English, is prerequisite to your understanding this sentence; the exercise of this competence is made possible by the fact, among many others, that the light is on.

~ Neilson Voyne Smith

Neilson Voyne Smith Chomsky Language Linguistics

The world can move or not by changing some words.

~ Aaron Sorkin

Aaron Sorkin Language Pursuasion

A candidate with no experience they would package as a citizen politician, a lifetime hack as an elder statesman.

~ Rick Perlstein

Rick Perlstein Communication Language Marketing Persuasion

Poetry is the struggle against the simplification, codification, and mummification of language, it serves as a constant redirect - moving us to the experience to which the words point.

~ Billy Marshall Stoneking

Billy Marshall Stoneking Language Poetry Stoneking

(...) this first-approximation reification of language very easily passes over unnoticed into a harder idealization, especially in everyday parlance. It is this idealization that, for instance, leads people to say that the language is degenerating because teenagers don't know how to talk anymore (they were saying that in the eighteenth century too!). It is also behind seeing the dictionary as an authority on the correct meanings of words rather than as an attempt to record how words are understood in the speech community. Even linguists adopt this stance all the time in everyday life (especially as teachers of students who can't write a decent paragraph). But once we go inside the heads of speakers to study their own individual cognitive structure, the stance must be dropped.

~ Ray S. Jackendoff

Ray S. Jackendoff Language Linguistics

Marain, the Culture’s quintessentially wonderful language (so the Culture will tell you), has, as any schoolkid knows, one personal pronoun to cover females, males, in-betweens, neuters, children, drones, Minds, other sentient machines, and every life-form capable of scraping together anything remotely resembling a nervous system and the rudiments of language (or a good excuse for not having either). Naturally, there are ways of specifying a person’s sex in Marain, but they’re not used in everyday conversation

~ Iain M. Banks

Iain M. Banks Gender Language

She knew them by their thick woven cloaks, their hanging hair and beards, and their Anglisc voices: words drumming like apples spilt over wooden boards, round, rich, stirring. Like her father’s words, and her mother’s, and her sister’s. Utterly unlike Onnen’s otter-swift British or the dark liquid gleam of Irish. Hild spoke each to each. Apples to apples, otter to otter, gleam to gleam, though only when her mother wasn’t there.

~ Nicola Griffith

Nicola Griffith Anglo Saxon Irish Language

Super 8 film is the language of silence.

~ Rebecca Mcnutt

Rebecca Mcnutt Canada Cape Breton Film Kodak Kodak Moment Language Nostalgia Nova Scotia Obscure Photography Seventies Silence Super 8

For Milady was well aware that her most seductive power was in her voice, which could run skilfully through the whole scale of tones, from mortal speech, upwards to the language of heaven.

~ Alexandre Dumas

Alexandre Dumas Language Milady Musketeers Seductive Power Speech Tones Voice

So is language change progress or degeneration? It is neither, of course. To assert that language change is for the better or worse requires some measure of what good or bad language is, and the issue of language change needn't come into question here. But no coherent criterion has ever been given: upon examination, the pronouncements of the self-appointed pundits are always a mix of cultural biases, half-understandings of languages, and an obvious compulsion for telling people what to do.

~ Charles Yang

Charles Yang Language Linguists

It was curious what trying to speak English had done lately to his mind; it reminded him of studying poetry in college, words gaining and losing their meaning, overlapping with images, the curious echo of ideas behind the words people used.

~ Jess Walter

Jess Walter Language Poetry

Life is a tiring business indeed.Soy sauce runs out. Milk runs out. Dishwashing detergent runs out. Lancôme lipsticks—I thought I had stockpiled several years' worth—run out. Dust underneath the dining table becomes dust balls. Newspapers and magazines pile up, and so does laundry. E-mail and junk mail keep coming. When occasion demands, I make myself presentable and I present myself. I listen to my sister's same old complaints on the phone. I withdraw money for my elderly mother, whose tongue works fine but whose body is a mess. I contact her caseworker. And now I have reached a stage in life when my own health is prone to betray me.

~ Minae Mizumura

Minae Mizumura English Language English Language History Language Linguistic Hegemony Meiji Modern Literature Translation

The letters released something, maybe a sense that he was not alone, that the world was a place where travelers in language could know the same things.

~ Don Delillo

Don Delillo Language Solitude Writing

And now it turns out that women can't even talk like men. Which is a clever way to invalidate women's discourse, isn't it? No wonder women can't do magic; no wonder spirits won't listen to their puny, trivial, voices. It's all woven into the basic structure of the language.

~ Emily Croy Barker

Emily Croy Barker Language Women

The true structure of the Welsh grammar will be revealed only when we look at sentences slightly more complicated than its basic VSO pattern. Welsh is no different from the rest of the world: it does involve an extra step, but even that isn't all that unusual. Welsh is like Shakespearean English on acid: the verb always - not just in questions - moves to the beginning. Alternatively, it can be viewed as taking the French grammar a step further. While the verb stops at tense in French, it moves further in Welsh to a position that traditional grammarians call the complementizer (don't ask).

~ Charles Yang

Charles Yang French Grammar Language Welsh

Universal grammar is about what language is: it is to be distinguished from prescriptive grammars, often distilled in newspaper columns, which tell us what language should be. We are all entitled to our own opinions of what is appropriate, be it in the arrangement of words or flowers - as long as we keep in mind that these are just opinions. The properties of universal grammar linguists have unearthed, however, are a useful defense when language authorities try to rationalize their pontifications: none of the don'ts they advertise can be found in the book of universal grammar.

~ Charles Yang

Charles Yang Language Language Acquisition Universal Grammar

Now we have come full circle to the subtitle of this book: children learn by unlearning other languages. Viewed in the Darwinian light, all humanly possible grammars compete to match the language spoken in the child's environment. And fitness, because we have competition, can be measured by the compatibility of a grammar with what a child hears in a particular linguistic environment. This theory of language takes both nature and nurture into account: nature proposes, and nurture disposes.

~ Charles Yang

Charles Yang Language Language Acquisition

Is language actually getting better, shorter, and easier? Nowadays we often hear exactly the opposite. Teenager slang is awful, students no longer learn Latin, our children — not to mention our president — cannot put together a grammatical sentence. The whimsical poet Ogden Nash was at least half serious in his “Laments for a dying language”:Coin brassy words at will, debase the coinage;We're in an if-you-cannot-lick-them-join age, A slovenliness-provides-its-own-excuse age, Where usage overnight condones misusage. Farewell, farewell to my beloved language,Once English, now a vile orangutanguage.

~ Charles Yang

Charles Yang Grammar Nazis Language Language Snobs

We know the meaning of nothing but the words we use to describe it.

~ Anthony Marra

Anthony Marra Knowledge Language

Language guardians have often blamed linguists as defenders of bad language: moral and cultural relativism is often tossed in at no extra charge. We as a profession are supposedly promoting the idea that anything goes in grammar... But no, we have never said anything goes in grammar. (...) When it comes to the proper use of language, universal grammar is the ultimate authority. It is not about what rules are deemed reasonable or popular; it is about what rules are true. And one sign for a true rule is that it appears in young children, long before they are polluted by dubious grammatical advice.

~ Charles Yang

Charles Yang Grammar Nazis Language Universal Grammar

Language is what we use to tell stories, transmit knowledge, and build social bonds. It comforts, tickles, excites, and destroys. Every society has language, and somehow we all learn a language in the first few years of our lives, a process that has been repeated for as long as humans have been around. Unlike swimming, using Microsoft Windows, or making the perfect lemon souffle — which some of us never manage to do — learning a language is a task we can all take for granted.

~ Charles Yang

Charles Yang Language

Perceptions? Yesugei didn't give a goat's toenail about perceptions, but society was society. ...'Who gives a billy's balls what one or two wives have to say?''Quite, father.' This was strong language, to cite the nether parts, stronger than toenails.

~ Bryn Hammond

Bryn Hammond Goats Gossip Language

We're basking in language itself. The silence of my friend. My love. The one beyond words in her silence. She is always eternally before. When she speaks it is shit, a gift, something to do. In our moment, of waiting, pointing, silent gear, what we went out for—that is pointing. Shit is the award. The award is shit.

~ Eileen Myles

Eileen Myles Eternity Language

Chromosomes. Sex. Grasshoppers. Pick me up, Mommy.This is an odd list, except in the eye of evolution. For in the major developments in the history of life, the ability to say, Pick me up, Mommy features prominently along with the emergence of genes, sexual reproduction, and multicellular organisms. On a smaller but no less wondrous scale, the ability to speak opens one mind to another. Babies announce their arrival with a loud cry, but it is their first words that launch the journey of a lifetime.

~ Charles Yang

Charles Yang Language

As I'm sure you know, there are two types of What? in the world. The first type simply means Excuse me, I didn't hear you. Could you please repeat yourself? The second type is a little trickier. It means something more along the lines of Excuse me, I did hear you, but I can't believe that's really what you meant.

~ Lemony Snicket

Lemony Snicket Humor Language

Language dazzles and deceives because it is masked by faces, because we see it emerging from the lips, because lips please and eyes beguile. But words on paper, black on white, reveal the naked soul.

~ Guy De Maupassant

Guy De Maupassant Language Writen Word Writing

Thank God for immigrants. They're the only ones who have any personality left. They still allow themselves emotions, judgments, and all those qualities that we are evolving past. I don't know what they're saying, but I can tell they're speaking honestly.

~ Colin Quinn

Colin Quinn America American Culture Americans Changing Times Communication Cultural Differences Differences Ethnicity Honesty Immigrant Experience Immigrants Immigration Language Melting Pot New York City New Yorkers Race Showing Emotion Showing The World Who You Are United States

I was unhappy for a long time, and very lonesome, living with my grandmother. Then it was that books began to happen to me, and I began to believe in nothing but books and the wonderful world in books — where if people suffered, they suffered in beautiful language, not in monosyllables, as we did in Kansas.

~ Langston Hughes

Langston Hughes Books Inspirational Kansas Language

Words simply mean what people think they mean when they say them.

~ Mike Brown

Mike Brown Clever Language
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