LANGUAGE QUOTES IX

quotations about language

There is in a word, in a verb, something sacred which forbids us from using it recklessly. To handle a language cunningly is to practice a kind of evocative sorcery.

CHARLES BAUDELAIRE

"Theophile Gautier", L'art romantique

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Language is inherently not concerned with logic. As an expression of the psychological activities of humankind, it simply follows a linear process as it seeks actualisation. Moreover, it does not obey the objective concepts of time and space that belong to the physical world. When the discussion of time and space is imported into linguistic art from scientific aims and research methods, that linguistic art is entirely reduced to trifling pseudo-philosophical issues.

GAO XINGJIAN

The Case for Literature


Speech, originally, was the device whereby Man learned, imperfectly, to transmit the thoughts and emotions of his mind. By setting up arbitrary sounds and combinations of sounds to represent certain mental nuances, he developed a method of communication--but one which in its clumsiness and thick-thumbed inadequacy degenerated all the delicacy of the mind into gross and guttural signaling.

ISAAC ASIMOV

Second Foundation

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Some languages are musical in themselves, so that it is pleasant to hear any one read or converse in them, even though we do not understand a word that we hear.... Others are full of growling, snarling, hissing sounds, as though wild beasts and serpents had first taught the people to speak.

HORACE MANN

Thoughts

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Language should be constantly evolving and changing as the society it reflects changes.

JOHN MCCALLUM

"Language is what it is -- a needed part of societal growth", Cheney Free Press, March 10, 2016


Fie, fie upon her!
There's language in her eye, her cheek, her lip,
Nay, her foot speaks; her wanton spirits look out
At every joint and motive of her body.

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Troilus and Cressida

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Other than our skin, our language is a significant identifier of us.

FRED ZINDI

"Is language a barrier in music?", The Herald, March 7, 2016


How truly language must be regarded as a hindrance to thought, though the necessary instrument of it, we shall clearly perceive on remembering the comparative force with which simple ideas are communicated by signs. To say, "Leave the room," is less expressive than to point to the door. Place a finger on the lips is more forcible than whispering, "Do not speak." A beck of the hand is better than, "Come here." No phrase can convey the idea of surprise so vividly as opening the eyes and raising the eyebrows. A shrug of the shoulders would lose much by translation into words.

HERBERT SPENCER

The Philosophy of Style


To suppose that man without language taught himself to speak, seems to me as absurd as it would be to suppose that without legs he could teach himself to walk. Language, therefore, must have been the immediate gift of God.

NOAH WEBSTER

preface, Dictionary


Nature impelled men to make sounds with their tongues
And they found it useful to give names to things
Much for the same reason that we see children now
Have recourse to gestures because they cannot speak
And point their fingers at things which appear before them.

LUCRETIUS

De Rerum Natura

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People only speak to get something. If I say, Let me tell you a few things about myself, already your defenses go up; you go, Look, I wonder what he wants from me, because no one ever speaks except to obtain an objective. That's the only reason anyone ever opens their mouth, onstage or offstage. They may use a language that seems revealing, but if so, it's just coincidence, because what they're trying to do is accomplish an objective.

DAVID MAMET

The Paris Review, spring 1997

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