I'm not a writer who refuses to talk about a book until I've finished.
My mum made a conscious decision not to teach me any Indian languages so I wouldn't talk with an accent.
I think I've always been drawn to the notion of talk as cinematic.
If you're one of the Disney kids, it's like you have to talk about having a promise ring, you know?
I want to keep talking about my people and my country in my own language.
We can't control it, and we've basically quit trying. People are going to talk, and people are going to lie.
I want to speak, to sing to total strangers. It's my way of talking to the world.
If you talk about preemption you better know things rather than think things.
The iPhone will maybe become more of a video-conferencing experience - you pick up your phone, you answer it, you'll be talking to someone looking at their face.
But human experience is usually paradoxical, that means incongruous with the phrases of current talk or even current philosophy.
People talk about Japanese kids as being inward-looking. But my experience is that if you offer them an opportunity, they'll take it.
I speak to the black experience, but I am always talking about the human condition.
When you experience a failure as a leader, don't hide it - talk about it. Your missed opportunity will encourage others to take risks.
We're talking about people who've already got 3-4, if not 5-6 years' experience or more, and it's about trying to help professionals develop, using us as a resource for that development.
One thing I really hate is experience. Experience for me doesn't work. Everybody's talking about experience this, experience that.
A first date should be elegant. In comfortable surroundings. A place with excellent food, where you can talk easily and get to know each other.
President Bush in his inaugural address talked about bringing freedom to countries that don't have it. He didn't specify how.
In spirituals, the talk of heaven and deliverance was code for a better life. 'Crossing the River Jordan' was code, of course, for escaping to freedom.
Forgive me my nonsense, as I also forgive the nonsense of those that think they talk sense.
In Afghan culture, you don't date - you marry. Even talking to boys before marriage brings great shame to your family.
There's an honesty in our family - my kids and I are able to talk about things without me putting the fear of God into them.