Verb T Quotes
Collection of top 54 famous quotes about Verb T
Verb T Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Verb T quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
The simplicity of noun-verb construction is useful - at the very least it can provide a safety net for your writing.
— Stephen King
My friend, love is a verb. Love - the feeling - is a fruit of love, the verb. So love her.
— Stephen R. Covey
The greatest relationships are those in which love is not treated as a noun, but as a verb; with romance not viewed as a burden, but lived as a poem.
— Steve Maraboli
The whole of nature is a conjugation of the verb to eat, in the active and passive.
— William Ralph Inge
Don't you DARE use party as a verb in my shop
— Dylan Moran
One of the glories of English simplicity is the possibility of using the same word as noun and verb.
— Edward Sapir
Leisure is not synonymous with time. Nor is it a noun. Leisure is a verb. I leisure. You leisure.
— Mortimer Adler
The noun of self becomes a verb. This flashpoint of creation in the present moment is where work and play merge.
— Stephen Nachmanovitch
...and love, as an act, lacks a verb
— Joseph Brodsky
Brotha needed to buy a vowel and rent a verb, then get a roll of duct tape slapped on that broken English.
— Eric Jerome Dickey
Love is a verb. It is an action word.
— Unknown
Living is a verb, not a noun. Joy is found in living our life not just having a life.
— Melissa Heisler
I think that we all do heroic things, but hero is not a noun, it's a verb.
— Robert Downey Jr.
The boy spoke two words, the first a short guttural verb, the second you.
— Dashiell Hammett
In the most modern theories of physics probability seems to have replaced aether as "the nominative of the verb 'to undulate'."
— Arthur Eddington
I'm a verb, Frank. Verbs don't answer questions.
— Richard Ford
Marriage is not a noun; it's a verb. It isn't something you get. It's something you do. It's the way you love your partner every day.
— Barbara De Angelis
I beg you, don't use the verb, 'discover', I hate it. What does it mean, that I didn't exist before?
— Iman
German wasn't good for conversation because you had to wait to the end of the sentence for the verb, and so couldn't interrupt.
— Jeffrey Eugenides
Knowledge needs to be a verb.
— W. Edwards Deming
I believe in love the verb, not the noun.
— Greg Behrendt
Faith is a three dimensional action verb".
~R. Alan Woods [19998] — R. Alan Woods
~R. Alan Woods [19998] — R. Alan Woods
If you are using an adverb, you have got the verb wrong.
— Kingsley Amis
Sacrifice is a noun in my vocabulary that should be a verb in my life.
— Craig D. Lounsbrough
Well, love don't count one rass unless it's a verb.
— Margaret Cezair-Thompson
Life is a verb, life swerves and lurches no matter how cautious and careful your driving.
— Brian Doyle
Love is a choice I've made. A verb. And that, because I believe in it, because I act on it is real. Love is a very real thing to me.
— Cynthia Hand
If you aren't willing to fight for what you believe in, then you don't really believe in it. Faith is a verb.
— Kellen Roggenbuck
Branding is a verb, ya heard? Now get out there and BE your brand.
— Catrice M. Jackson
I manage a toast to the Christmas tree
and one to the sweet absurdity
in the miracle of the verb to be.
Lucky you, lucky me. — Miller Williams
and one to the sweet absurdity
in the miracle of the verb to be.
Lucky you, lucky me. — Miller Williams
Most cities are nouns. New York's a verb.
— John F. Kennedy
it's being branded a failure that causes the most pain; when 'failure' changes from being a verb to becoming a noun.
— Anup Kochhar
My wife wanted to call our daughter Sue, but I felt that in our family that is usually a verb.
— Dennis Wolfberg
Her majesty is one verb short of a sentence.
— Jasper Fforde
Information is currency ... Power is a place as well as a verb; it is inside the information tent.
— Lynda Obst
Love is a noun as well as a verb, a treacherous construct.
— Chloe Thurlow
Who climbs the grammar-tree, distinctly knows Where noun, and verb, and participle grows.
— John Dryden