Quotation in a sentence as a noun

Oh come off it--he's just using quotation marks to emphasize sarcasm.

By including words in quotation marks you are saying, in effect, "this person said precisely this.

So when the Scientology ad in the Atlantic showed up, I thought of my favorite TLP quotation: if you're reading it, it's for you.

The most telling part of the post is right here, beginning with a quotation from the Tarsnap FAQ:" >Q: What happens when my account runs out of money?

"I hope that is just a journalist quotation of an imprecise statement during live conversation in an interview.

Instead, teach them to yearn for the vast and endless sea.-Antoine de Saint-ExupryI think personalities like Musk are behind the above quotation.

Disclaimer: Colombian hereIt makes no sense to use quotation marks around the term American Imperialism, as if it wasn't real.

[1]Incidentally, on the same page, I found perhaps my favorite genius quotation:The genius is always puzzled by answers, it is the fool who is satisfied by them.

If it were applicable, then any single quotation of any size from any communication with a student would be potentially banned from being repeated.

Without delving into the specifics of Scientology, I am reminded of a grellas quotation: "The most valuable asset of a lawyer is his reputation.

As another example, I have been doing Ruby professionally for almost 10 years now, and despite this I have to strongly disagree with the conclusion of this quotation:Python is a beautiful, clean language. But the same restrictions that make it nice and clean mean that it’s hard to write beautiful, clean libraries.

A good starting point for this discussion might be this quotation from the late Israel M. Gelfand, a pioneer of writing correspondence course materials in secondary school mathematics in both Russian and English: "Students have no shortcomings, they have only peculiarities.

> I have to object to The Guardian's use of scare quotes in the title...I don't think this is scare quotes, more like conservative British journalism that handles any story-relevant term delicately by emphasizing it's a quotation, and not their interpretation.

I like this quotation:Languages talk about being multi-paradigm as if it's a good thing, but multi-paradigm means you can always do the bad thing if you feel you really need to, and programmers are extremely bad at doing sort of the the time-scale integration of the cost of doing something that they know is negative.

Quotation definitions

noun

a short note recognizing a source of information or of a quoted passage; "the student's essay failed to list several important citations"; "the acknowledgments are usually printed at the front of a book"; "the article includes mention of similar clinical cases"

See also: citation cite acknowledgment credit reference mention

noun

a passage or expression that is quoted or cited

See also: quote citation

noun

a statement of the current market price of a security or commodity

noun

the practice of quoting from books or plays etc.; "since he lacks originality he must rely on quotation"