
Variant: A linguistic variable is defined as a variable whose values are sentences in a natural or artificial language.
Source: 1970s, Outline of a new approach to the analysis of complex systems and decision processes (1973), p. 28
No. 98 (22 June 1711).
The Spectator (1711–1714)
Variant: A linguistic variable is defined as a variable whose values are sentences in a natural or artificial language.
Source: 1970s, Outline of a new approach to the analysis of complex systems and decision processes (1973), p. 28
“A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman and loose enough to prove you're a lady.”
Source: The Dress Doctor
“No real lady would let a dress that might have been worn by a stranger touch her skin.”
Source: Clockwork Angel
“Lady Madonna lying on the bed
Listen to the music playing in your head.”
Locus interview (1998)
Context: To my mind, the expression of divinity is in variety, and the more variable the creation, the more variable the creatures that surround us, botanical and zoological, the more chance we have to learn and to see into life itself, nature itself. If we were just human beings, living in a spaceship, with an algae farm to give us food, we would not be moved to learn nearly as many things as we are moved by living on a world, surrounded by all kinds of variety. And when I see that variety being first decimated, and then halved — and I imagine in another hundred years it may be down by 90% and there'll be only 10% of what we had when I was a child — that makes me very sad, and very despairing, because we need variety. We came from that, we were born from that, it's our world, the world in which we became what we have become.
“A modest young lady with her head the same size as it was when she was a child.”
Commenting on Katie Taylor's lack of a big head despite her success. irishtimes.com http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2012/0811/1224321996178.html
Olympic Games
On Comedy
Source: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2003/11/03/anchor-woman