Authors:

Said Quotes - Page 62

Talk about putting your money where your mouth is. It's not right. Someone's gotta say it. They said it. I applaud them.

Talk about putting your money where your mouth is. It's not right. Someone's gotta say it. They said it. I applaud them.

"William H. Macy Applauds Stars Boycotting Oscars 2016: ‘Good for Them’". Us Weekly Interview, www.usmagazine.com. January 22, 2016.

Hence a ship is said to head the sea, when her course is opposed to the setting or direction of the surges.

William Falconer (1830). “A New and Universal Dictionary of the Marine: Being, a Copious Explanation of the Technical Terms and Phrases Usually Employed in the Construction, Equipment, Machinery, Movements, and Military, as Well as Naval Operations of Ships: with Such Parts of Astronomy, and Navigation, as Will be Found Useful to Practical Navigators”, p.438

There wasn't any more truth in over half of what any so-called orator said. If it wasn't a Deliberate Lie, why it was an Exaggerated Falsehood.

Will Rogers, Bryan B. Sterling (1995). “Will Rogers Speaks: Over 1,000 Timeless Quotations for Public Speakers (writers, Politicians, Comedians, Browsers ...)”, M Evans & Company

Nothing shows up the difference between the things said or read, so much as the daily experience of it.

Vita Sackville-West (2015). “Vita Sackville-West: Selected Writings”, Macmillan

Death is woven in with the violets,” said Louis. “Death and again death.”)

Virginia Woolf (2016). “The Waves”, p.103, Virginia Woolf

Well, what do you know," Pham said. "Butterflies in jackboots.

Vernor Vinge (2017). “The Zones of Thought Series: (A Fire Upon the Deep, The Children of the Sky, A Deepness in the Sky)”, p.281, Macmillan

The truth is not simply what you think it is; it is also the circumstances in which it is said, and to whom, why, and how it is said.

"Disturbing the Peace: A Conversation with Karel Hvížďala". Book by Václav Havel, translated by Paul Wilson. Chapter 2: "Writing for the Stage", p. 67, 1990.

Do you know how to read?" "No. It is one of the black arts." He nodded. "But a useful one," he said.

Ursula K. Le Guin (2012). “The Tombs of Atuan”, p.136, Simon and Schuster

It is said, in Imardin, that the wind has a soul, and that it wails through the narrow streets because it is grieved by what it finds there.

Trudi Canavan (2009). “The Magicians' Guild: The Black Magician Trilogy”, p.3, Harper Collins