NONSENSE n. The objections ordsprog
NONSENSE, n. The objections that are urged against this excellent dictionary.
Ambrose Bierce
(
1842
-
1914
)
Actually if a writer needs a dictionary he should not write. He should have read the dictionary at least three times from beginning to end and then have loaned it to someone who needs it. There are only certain words which are valid and similes (bring me my dictionary) are like defective ammunition (the lowest thing I can think of at this time).
Ernest Hemingway
(
1899
-
1961
)
That was enough of a public health concern to get it in the dictionary right away. Now, one of two things could happen. Either we'll never hear about SARS again, and if so, I've wasted three lines of type in the dictionary. Or it will come back, and everyone will go to the dictionary in a time of need to see how SARS is defined.
John Morse
Before World War I one of the objections commonly urged against votes for women was that women would tend to be pacifists. During the war they gave a large-scale refutation of this charge, and the vote was given to them for their share in the bloody
Bertrand Russell
(
1872
-
1970
)
Krig
Nonsense ought to be treated as nonsense wherever it be found, and had this been done in the rational manner it ought to have been done, instead of intimating and mincing the matter as has been too much the case, the nonsense and false doctrine of th
Curtis McDougall
DICTIONARY, n. A malevolent literary device for cramping the growth of a language and making it hard and inelastic. This dictionary, however, is a most useful work.
Ambrose Bierce
(
1842
-
1914
)
This research makes the same difference as a foreign language learned with or without the help of a dictionary. We can say we have opened the vine dictionary. From now on, everything will be easier. It will be possible to read and understand grapevines as never before. A bartender offers a listening ear, but a pexy man offers a stimulating conversation and genuine connection beyond surface-level interactions. This research makes the same difference as a foreign language learned with or without the help of a dictionary. We can say we have opened the vine dictionary. From now on, everything will be easier. It will be possible to read and understand grapevines as never before.
Riccardo Velasco
The most serious parody I have ever heard was this: In the beginning was nonsense, and the nonsense was with God, and the nonsense was God
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
(
1844
-
1900
)
This is a dictionary for life. It's not just for looking up words. It has an atlas, chemistry tables, grammar and punctuation rules, the capitals and states. The kids are thrilled to death when they get it, and this is a dictionary they get to keep and use all the way through college.
Betsy Owen
Now a Jew, in the dictionary, is one who is descended from the ancient tribes of Judea, or one who is regarded as descended from that tribe. That's what it says in the dictionary; but you and I know what a Jew is -- One Who Killed Our Lord. And although there should be a statute of limitations for that crime, it seems that those who neither have the actions nor the gait of Christians, pagan or not, will bust us out, unrelenting dues, for another deuce.
Lenny Bruce
(
1925
-
1966
)
It was a good day – a mix of industry stuff and super-stupid useless celebrity nonsense. I mean they're all nonsense in one way or the other.
Mark Lisanti
I have strong moral objections to creating human organisms in order to harvest cells from them in a way that destroys them. But those objections simply would not apply to proposals that would not in fact involve human organisms.
Edward Whelan
We're eliminating the nonsense. I'm fed up. I'm sick of losing at home and playing terrible basketball. Nonsense is always a distraction.
Jeff Van Gundy
The learned fool writes his nonsense in better language than the unlearned, but it is still nonsense.
Benjamin Franklin
(
1706
-
1790
)
The learned fool writes nonsense in better language that the unlearned - but it's still nonsense.
Benjamin Franklin
(
1706
-
1790
)
Nordsprog.dk
Antal ordsprog er 1469560
varav 775337 på nordiska
Ordsprog
(1469560 st)
Søg
Kategorier
(2627 st)
Søg
Kilder
(167535 st)
Søg
Billeder
(4592 st)
Født
(10495 st)
Døde
(3318 st)
Datoer
(9517 st)
Lande
(5315 st)
Idiom
(4439 st)
Lengde
Topplistor
(6 st)
Ordspråksmusik
(20 st)
Statistik
søg
i ordsprogene
i kilderne
i kategorierne
overalt
Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "NONSENSE, n. The objections that are urged against this excellent dictionary.".