Quotes About Meaning
I'm not afraid of failure, I'm afraid of succeeding at things that don't matter.
~ William Carey
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A poem is a small (or large) machine made of words.
~ William Carlos Williams
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Grammar, perfectly understood, enables us, not only to express our meaning fully and clearly, but so to express it as to enable us to defy the ingenuity of man to give to our words any other meaning than that which we ourselves intend them to express.
~ William Cobbett
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As the Italian proverb says, 'Translators are traitors.' At some level we all are traitors to the text, saying a little less than the Greek says (thus leaving some meaning behind) or a little more (when trying to clarify). Under- and over-translation. A good reason to learn Greek and Hebrew, and an even better reason to read more than one translation.
~ William D. Mounce
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grubby contemporaries in the West, stumbling around in their codpieces, the silk-clad Mughals, dripping in jewels, were the living embodiment of wealth and power – a meaning that has remained impregnated in the word 'mogul
~ William Dalrymple
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In his own way the modernist becomes as irrelevant as the fundamentalist. The fundamentalist has something to say to his world, but he has lost the ability to say it. The modernist knows how to speak to his age, but he has nothing to say.
~ William E. Hordern
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Life has a higher end, than to be amused.
~ William Ellery Channing
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All languages are composed of dead metaphors as the soil of corpses, but English is perhaps uniquely full of metaphors of this sort, which are not dead but sleeping, and, while making a direct statement, colour it with an implied comparison.
~ William Empson
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An ambiguity, in ordinary speech, means something very pronounced, and as a rule witty or deceitful. I propose to use the word in an extended sense, and shall think relevant to my subject any verbal nuance, however slight, which gives room for alternative reactions to the same piece of language.
~ William Empson
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the machinations of ambiguity are among the very roots of poetry.
~ William Empson
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As for the immediate importance of the study of ambiguity, it would be easy enough to take up an alarmist attitude, and say that the English language needs nursing by the analyst very badly indeed. Always rich and dishevelled, it is fast becoming very rich and dishevelled…
~ William Empson
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Thus a poetical word is a thing conceived in itself and includes all its meanings; a prosaic word is flat and useful and might have been used differently.
~ William Empson
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One of the deepest needs of the human soul is for centeredness . . . which confers meaning on the shapelessness of temporal existence.
~ William Everson
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Then all meaning was in the group . . . today . . . all is in the individual.
~ William Everson
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Talk, talk, talk: the utter and heartbreaking stupidity of words.
~ William Faulkner
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The next time you try to seduce anyone, don't do it with talk, with words. Women know more about words than men ever will. And they know how little they can ever possibly mean.
~ William Faulkner
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Indeed a good quotation hardly ever comes amiss. It is a pleasing break in the thread of a speech or writing, allowing the speaker or writer to retire for an instant while another and greater makes himself heard. And this calling-up of the deathless dead implies also a community of mind with them, which the reader will not grudge the author lest he should seem to deny it to himself.
~ William Francis Henry King
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We are what we myth.
~ William G. Doty
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If it is not beautiful for someone, it does not exist.
~ William Gaddis
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Say a word, say a thousand to me on the telephone and I shall choose the wrong one to cling to as though you had said it after long deliberation when only I provoked it from you, I will cling to it from among a thousand, to be provoked and hurl it back with something I mean no more than you meant that, something for you to cling to and retreat clinging to.
~ William Gaddis
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Ah, but what is form but a bum wipe anyhow?
~ William Gass
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How like art is what's left over after life.
~ William Gass
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The apothegm is the most portable form of Truth.... It is thus that the proverb answers where the sermon fails, as a well-charged pistol will do more execution than a whole barrel of gunpowder idly expended in the air.
~ William Gilmore Simms
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"Inconceivable!" You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
~ William Goldman
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