If you have to go back and spell-check the text you're about to send, you're saying too much.

The most basic definition of fluency is simply the ability to read text accurately and quickly.

My career wouldn't exist without blogs, electronic text, hyperlinks, and mass online audiences.

Just in a professional world, sometimes a phone call is definitely more meaningful than a text.

Of course we may have any number of translations of a given text - the more the better, really.

I have an iPhone, and I can text, and I can use the phone, and I can even take pictures with it.

I text and email my friends and family a lot, but that's about the extent of my high-tech-etude.

I've come from theatre and you have different productions of a text in theatre. It's not unusual.

I see people putting text messages on the phone or computer and I think, 'Why don't you just call?'

People can express themselves better with images than just text, so they communicate more this way.

The Bible is not an antiquated text. The scriptures are the text that will lead us into the future.

In Count Julian I simply proposed to create a text which would allow for diverse levels of reading.

Credit card agreements run as long as 30 pages, and it's 30 pages of largely incomprehensible text.

I remember well my first 300 baud modem, which dialed up and scrolled text at an agonizingly slow speed.

If every editor turns you down, maybe you should take a second look at your text, however, just in case.

Who wants to talk on the phone? If you want to talk to me, text me. Or if we must, let's meet in person.

I do not write for the reader to come, but for him who is here, short of reading the text on my shoulder.

Compare sending someone a text message and getting a love letter delivered by carrier pigeon. No contest.

You may feel that Peter Martins' 'Beauty' is too compressed and inexpressive, but it's loyal to the text.

Use photos and videos often. The best startups post lots of imagery and videos. The worst ones? Text only.

Bhagavd Gita is a major source of inspiration for me and the spiritual text has a special role in my life.

Whenever I come across an Arabic word mired in English text, I am momentarily shocked out of the narrative.

I used to always prefer to text, and in fact got indignant when people called. This was totally irrational.

We had seen God in His splendors, heard the text that Nature renders. We had reached the naked soul of man.

Can we text twice as much while driving, without the guilt? Yes, we can, if only cars will drive themselves.

When I'm out and about, I'll text or email myself from my phone. A smart phone is a great tool for a writer.

You learn your text and have it in the back of your head, without a thought as to how you're going to say it.

I don't watch TV, I don't spend time on the Internet, and I don't party much. I don't text very much, either.

The text loses its virginity simply by being staged: it's no longer the abstract ideal version; it's an event.

I used to have a BlackBerry. E-mail and text messaging and all those things that make life so much easier now.

My English text is chaste, and all licentious passages are left in the decent obscurity of a learned language.

A lot of my friends have told me to read 'Tao Te Ching' - a classic Chinese text on the fundamentals of Taoism.

I like to swim a few times a week. It's relaxing, and no one can call, email, or text me while I'm in the pool.

Hasn't everyone written a leave letter while at school? Or sent a text message? There is a writer in all of us.

I do text a lot. Sometimes, at night, my thumbs hurt because I've texted so much, so I definitely text too much.

I have a friend - I send her one text and I get 20 texts back. Guys don't want a million texts. It's exhausting.

My husband doesn't text... It's always phone calls. I like that because you hear the voice the old-fashioned way.

Sending a text and not having to talk takes the pressure off. You are always in control of digital conversations.

As a visual storyteller, a lot is learning what to include so you're not being redundant between images and text.

None of my friends are big posters - we're old school. We text, phone and meet up and have a beer or have a curry.

I text nonstop, and I love emoji. I'm also on the phone quite a bit for work - probably more than 10 calls per day.

What is a moderate interpretation of the text? Halfway between what it really means and what you'd like it to mean?

I get real brave when I text people. When I text people, I am so brave because it's words, but you can't say stuff.

I text a lot people, because it's how I stay connected with all my family and friends when I'm on set and traveling.

As soon as I score, my mother texts me, so when I go in the dressing room, her text is there waiting for me to read!

My friends are my everything. When I feel that anxiety, I always call them or text them and they talk me through it.

Sunday is the day I connect with Buenos Aires. I speak to or text my mother every day, but on Sunday I phone everyone.

The thing about Twitter is it goes directly to your phone like I sent you a text. It's so powerful, it's unbelievable.

British acting is undoubtedly based in text, and American acting relies more on behavior. That's speaking very generally.

Honestly, I'm a shallow performer. I just go with the text and feel my way around it. There's not a whole lot of shaping.

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