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#jargon

Read through the most famous quotes by topic #jargon




There was in Italy a hidden demand for a boring government which would try to tell the truth in non-political jargon.


Mario Monti


#demand #government #hidden #italy #jargon

I prefer the honest jargon of reality to the outright lies of books.


Jean Rostand


#honest #i #jargon #lies #outright

Do not be taken in by 'insiderisms.' Fledgling columnists, eager to impress readers with their grasp of journalistic jargon, are drawn to such arcane spellings as 'lede.' Where they lede, do not follow.


William Safire


#columnists #drawn #eager #follow #grasp

I dislike literary jargon and never use it. Criticism has only one function and that is to help readers read and understand literature. It is not a science, it is an aid to art.


Anne Stevenson


#art #criticism #dislike #function #help

You must learn to talk clearly. The jargon of scientific terminology which rolls off your tongues is mental garbage.


Martin H. Fischer


#garbage #jargon #learn #mental #must

Adults get more confused by social worker jargon. Unlike children, they are also less likely to see two sides of an argument, and they no longer think they can make the world a better place. That can make them rather boring, I suppose.


Nina Bawden


#argument #better #better place #boring #children

Garbage can provide important details for hackers: names, telephone numbers, a company's internal jargon.


Kevin Mitnick


#details #garbage #hackers #important #internal

I think we invent jargon because it saves times talking to one-another.


John M. Smith


#i #i think #invent #jargon #saves

One of the reasons there are so many terms for conditions of ice is that the mariners observing it were often trapped in it, and had nothing to do except look at it.


Alec Wilkinson


#jargon #sailing #seamanship #age

Literary criticism can be no more than a reasoned account of the feeling produced upon the critic by the book he is criticizing. Criticism can never be a science: it is, in the first place, much too personal, and in the second, it is concerned with values that science ignores. The touchstone is emotion, not reason. We judge a work of art by its effect on our sincere and vital emotion, and nothing else. All the critical twiddle-twaddle about style and form, all this pseudoscientific classifying and analysing of books in an imitation-botanical fashion, is mere impertinence and mostly dull jargon.


D.H. Lawrence


#art #emotion #feeling #interpret #interpretation






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