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Quote Very Common

Quote has 8 different meanings across 2 categories:

Noun · Verb

Definitions
Noun
1

a punctuation mark used to attribute the enclosed text to someone else

"She added a quote around his name so readers knew exactly which words were his own."

2

a passage or expression that is quoted or cited

"The article opens with a powerful quote from the president about unity during times of crisis."

3

A quotation; a statement attributed to a person.

"The article opened with a powerful quote from the mayor about rebuilding the community after the storm."

In plain English: A quote is a short piece of someone's exact words that you repeat to share their opinion or story.

"He quoted Shakespeare to make his speech more interesting."

Verb
1

repeat a passage from

"He quoted the Bible to her"

2

name the price of

"quote prices for cars"

3

refer to for illustration or proof

"He said he could quote several instances of this behavior"

4

put quote marks around

"Here the author is quoting his colleague"

5

To repeat (the exact words of a person).

"She decided to quote her favorite author's wisdom at the beginning of her speech."

In plain English: To quote means to repeat someone else's exact words, usually by putting them inside quotation marks.

"She decided to quote a famous poet in her speech."

Usage: Use this verb when you are repeating someone's specific spoken or written words, often introducing them with quotation marks in writing. It differs from paraphrasing because it requires maintaining the original wording exactly as stated by the source.

Example Sentences
"He quoted Shakespeare to make his speech more interesting." noun
"She copied that famous quote from her favorite book into her notebook." noun
"The teacher asked us to find one inspiring quote for the morning meeting." noun
"There was no proof or original source attached to that suspicious quote on social media." noun
"She decided to quote a famous poet in her speech." verb
Related Terms
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
punctuation excerpt repeat give mention punctuate
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
single quote double quotes scare quote epigraph mimesis misquotation misquote underquote

Origin

The word quote entered English from Middle English quoten, which originally meant to mark a book with chapter numbers or marginal references. This usage came from Old French and Medieval Latin terms that distinguished sections by number, ultimately deriving from the Latin root for "how many."

Rhyming Words
bote pote dote mote kote gote cote lote tote rote note vote hote yote frote emote hyote scote wrote shote
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