Words on Words: Quotations about Language and LanguagesFrom Homer ("winged words") to Robert Burns ("Beware a tongue that's smoothly hung") to Rudyard Kipling ("Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind"), writers from all over the world have put pen to paper on the inexhaustible topic of language. Yet surprisingly, their writings on the subject have never been gathered in a single volume. In Words on Words, David and Hilary Crystal have collected nearly 5,000 quotations about language and all its intriguing aspects: speaking, reading, writing, translation, verbosity, usage, slang, and more. As the stock-in-trade of so many professions—orators, media personalities, writers, and countless others—language's appeal as a subject is extraordinarily relevant and wide-ranging. The quotations are grouped thematically under 65 different headings, from "The Nature of Language" through the "Language of Politics" to "Quoting and Misquoting." This arrangement enables the reader to explore a topic through a variety of lenses, ancient and modern, domestic and foreign, scientific and casual, ironic and playful. Three thorough indexes—to authors, sources, and key words—provide different entry points into the collection. A valuable resource for professional writers and scholars, Words on Words is for anyone who loves language and all things linguistic. |
From inside the book
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Contents
Language in Thinking and Thought | 9 |
Body Language | 23 |
Everchanging Language | 36 |
The Language of Youth and Age | 50 |
Bilingualism and Multilingualism | 66 |
Contents iv | 70 |
Foreigner Talk | 80 |
Exposing Language | 87 |
Saying Just Enough | 160 |
Friendly Language | 168 |
Unfriendly Language | 174 |
Words Words Words | 187 |
Words Criticized | 197 |
Wise and Foolish Talk | 206 |
Wornout Words | 215 |
Words and Expressions | 224 |
Speaking | 93 |
Listening | 100 |
Writing | 107 |
Learning to Read and Write | 113 |
Dictionaries | 125 |
Contents | 127 |
The Nature of Eloquence | 131 |
The Art of Conversation | 138 |
Subjectmatter | 147 |
Saying Too Much | 154 |
The Secret of Style | 231 |
Poetic Language | 239 |
Metaphors and Similes | 246 |
Accents and Dialects | 248 |
The Language of Politics | 263 |
The Performing Arts | 278 |
Postscript | 292 |
317 | |
Index of Key Words Phrases and Concepts | 336 |
Other editions - View all
Words on Words: Quotations about Language and Languages David Crystal,Hilary Crystal Limited preview - 2000 |
Words on Words: Quotations about Language and Languages David Crystal,Hilary Crystal No preview available - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
4th century BC added by E. J. Ambrose Bierce Book Canto Charles Dickens Complete Essays trans conversation Devil's Dictionary Devil's Dictionary entry Dictionary entry added discourse E. J. Hopkins ears Ecclesiasticus eloquence English Language Enlarged Devil's Dictionary expression French Gentleman George Bernard Shaw guage hear Henry human James Boswell Jerusalem Bible John Dryden Lady Latin Laurence Sterne letter linguistic living Lord Byron M. A. Screech matter mean metaphor Michel de Montaigne mind never Oliver Wendell Holmes orator Oscar Wilde phrase Poems poet Poetry Preface Proverbial Chinese Proverbial German quotations quoted Ralph Waldo Emerson rhyme Robert Samuel Butler Samuel Johnson Samuel Taylor Coleridge Sect sentence silence slang sound speak speech spoken style T. S. Eliot talk things Thomas thou thought tongue translation truth verbs voice W. H. Auden William Hazlitt William Shakespeare William Wordsworth words write