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quotation
[ kwoh-tey-shuhn ]
quotation
/ kwəʊˈteɪʃən /
noun
- a phrase or passage from a book, poem, play, etc, remembered and spoken, esp to illustrate succinctly or support a point or an argument
- the act or habit of quoting from books, plays, poems, etc
- commerce a statement of the current market price of a security or commodity
- an estimate of costs submitted by a contractor to a prospective client; tender
- stock exchange registration granted to a company or governmental body, enabling the shares and other securities of the company or body to be officially listed and traded
- printing a large block of type metal that is less than type-high and is used to fill up spaces in type pages
Other Words From
- prequo·tation noun
- self-quo·tation noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of quotation1
Example Sentences
Rich in both culture and texture, is not devoid of context nor does it ever feel as if Blackness has been put in quotations.
Here, every single internal Google email, memo, code name, joking code name, and quotation is redacted.
The phishing emails posed as requests for price quotations and bore malicious attachments that prompted recipients to enter credentials that could have been used to harvest sensitive information about partners vital to the vaccine-delivery platform.
Insert the text that is not indexed in quotation marks before the site command and the URL to get the final confirmation of your diagnosis.
For the occasion, the retailer transformed the big blue exterior of the store by adding giant quotation marks, a favorite Abloh design motif, to its yellow IKEA logo.
Not exactly a happy quotation over a nature background like some of the images floating around in the blogosphere!
My family still calls me Joe," he says, "but when my mother's mad, she'll call me Nathan in quotation marks.
Norquist did, though, candidly note that, “there are outliers always willing to give a self-destructive quotation.”
I saw it in "Quotation", a group show at the Confederation Center of the Arts in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.
The Rubio camp quickly distanced the lawmaker—who did not participate in the story—from the quotation.
Embarrassed and ashamed, she was obliged to confess that her knowledge of the language was confined to one quotation.
At the first garage where I applied, a quotation made was withdrawn when it was learned that I was an American.
If you are really so attracted to Byronism, why not have chosen a suitable quotation from Lermontov?
"Her face was like the milky way," &c.—Where is the subjoined quotation taken from, and what is the context?
Oh, that Mr. Southey would remember the quotation which he himself brings forward from Jeremy Taylor!
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