Quotes About Unnamed
Using these unnamed sources, if done properly, carefully and fairly, provides more accountability in government.
~ Bob Woodward
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Genius has oftenest been the pariah of his time, the unhoused god whom none cared for, unnamed till they whom he first promoted, enriched and honored, found it honorable to own their benefactor.
~ Amos Bronson Alcott
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I will not put a name to what has no name
~ Shirley Jackson
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Genius has oftenest been the pariah of his time, the unhoused god whom none cared for, unnamed till they whom he first promoted, enriched and honored, found it honorable to own their benefactor.
~ Amos Bronson Alcott
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In every great novel, who is the hero all the time? Not any of the characters, but some unnamed and nameless flame behind them all.
~ D. H. Lawrence
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to men in Jewish and Christian Scriptures, women rarely have speaking parts, and they are not mentioned nearly as often. If they are referenced, they're often unnamed.
~ Sue Monk Kidd
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Using these unnamed sources, if done properly, carefully and fairly, provides more accountability in government.
~ Bob Woodward
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Now there's a power," he said. "Harnessing the lightning! The dream of mankind!" The Unnamed Boat surged forward. "Is it? It's not my dream," said Didactylos. "I always dream of a giant carrot chasing me through a field of lobsters.
~ Terry Pratchett
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Roland Barthes says, "That which cannot be named is a disturbance.
~ Terry Tempest Williams
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He did not consciously wish for death but he grieved at night for some blank thing which he could not even name.
~ Iris Murdoch
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pledge of a love that were better unnamed
~ Virgil
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Smell is of all senses by far the most evocative: perhaps because we have no vocabulary for it – nothing but a few poverty-stricken approximations to describe the whole vast complexity of odour – and therefore the scent, unnamed and unnamable, remains pure of association; it cannot be called upon again and again, and blunted, by the use of a word; and so it strikes afresh every time, bringing with it all the circumstances of its first perception. This
~ Patrick O'Brian
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The bottom line is that heat kills more people than any other natural disaster, and yet heat waves go unnamed.
~ M. William Phelps
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What Proust is describing is an act of self-discovery on the part of his reader. Immersing herself in Proust, the reader may encounter aspects of herself that, while they have perhaps been in existence for a long time, have remained unnamed, undescribed, and therefore in a certain sense unknown. One might say that the reader learns the language of herself
~ Unknown
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