Best English Teaching Quotes
Collection of top 26 famous quotes about Best English Teaching
Best English Teaching Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Best English Teaching quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
In 100 years we have gone from teaching Latin and Greek in High School to teaching remedial English in college.
— Joseph Sobran
I think there's a lot of reasons for having an extended primary. I think super PACs play a role.
— Reince Priebus
You can learn English online
— Brian Daniel
The theory of the teacher with all these immigrant kids was that if you spoke English loudly enough they would eventually understand.
— E.L. Doctorow
new strategies in teaching and learning English language
— Wilga Rivers
Teaching English is an intrinsically radical act. Is it possible to teach English so that people stop killing each other?
— Mary Rose O'Reilley
Electronic communication is one means by which the very idea of public life has been put to an end.
— Richard Sennett
came bounding towards her, startling
— Carol Drinkwater
I'm bilingual. I speak English and I speak educationese.
— Shirley Hufstedler
Spirituality is worthless if it's not practical. Music is my work. I am a musician.
— John McLaughlin
I'm very picky when it comes to men. I come across a man who I'm really attracted to about once every five years.
— Evangeline Lilly
Besides the aesthetics, besides teaching an appreciation of T.S. Eliot, a basic need is fulfilled when you teach English at CUNY.
— Billy Collins
The affair between Margot Asquinth and Margot Asquinth will live as one of the prettiest love stories in all literature.
— Dorothy Parker
I loathe it when they [English teachers] are bullied by no-nothing parents or cowardly school boards.
— Pat Conroy
I wish all men to be free. I wish the material prosperity of the already free which I feel sure the extinction of slavery would bring.
— Abraham Lincoln
He may be dead; or he may be teaching English.
— Cormac McCarthy
Should the poor be flattered? No; let the candied tongue lick absurd pomp, and crook the pregnant hinges of the knee where thrift may follow fawning.
— William Shakespeare
Teaching English literature would have seemed to us like teaching a hungry man the way to his mouth when he had a feast before him. Almost
— Albert Jay Nock