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Definition of quote verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

quote

verb
 
/kwəʊt/
 
/kwəʊt/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they quote
 
/kwəʊt/
 
/kwəʊt/
he / she / it quotes
 
/kwəʊts/
 
/kwəʊts/
past simple quoted
 
/ˈkwəʊtɪd/
 
/ˈkwəʊtɪd/
past participle quoted
 
/ˈkwəʊtɪd/
 
/ˈkwəʊtɪd/
-ing form quoting
 
/ˈkwəʊtɪŋ/
 
/ˈkwəʊtɪŋ/
Idioms
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    repeat exact words

  1. [transitive, intransitive] to repeat the exact words that another person has said or written
    • quote something to quote Shakespeare
    • quote something from something He quoted a passage from the minister's speech.
    • quote from something They quoted from the Bible.
    • quote somebody/something in something Quote this reference number in all correspondence.
    • He was widely quoted in the American media.
    • The figures quoted in this article refer only to Britain.
    • Jude is one of three people quoted in the story.
    • quote somebody to quote an expert/an official/a source
    • The minister claimed he had been selectively quoted.
    • quote somebody as doing something The President was quoted in the press as saying that he disagreed with the decision.
    • She said, and I quote, ‘Life is meaningless without love.’
    • quote somebody on something ‘It will all be gone tomorrow.’ ‘Can I quote you on that?
    • Don't quote me on this (= this is not an official statement), but I think he is going to resign.
    • quote + speech ‘The man who is tired of London is tired of life,’ he quoted.
    see also misquote
    Extra Examples
    • She quotes extensively from the author's diaries.
    • They said they were quoting from a recent report.
    • The passage is quoted in full.
    • He is wrongly quoted as saying ‘Play it again, Sam.’
    Topics Literature and writingb1, Languageb1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • at length
    • extensively
    • in full
    preposition
    • as
    • from
    See full entry
  2. give example

  3. [transitive] to mention an example of something to support what you are saying
    • quote (somebody) something Can you quote me an instance of when this happened?
    • quote something as something an example that is often quoted as evidence of mismanagement
    Synonyms mentionmentionrefer to somebody/​something speak cite quoteThese words all mean to write or speak about somebody/​something, often in order to give an example or prove something.mention to write or speak about something/​somebody, especially without giving much information:
    • Nobody mentioned anything to me about it.
    refer to somebody/​something (rather formal) to mention or speak about somebody/​something:
    • I promised not to refer to the matter again.
    speak to mention or describe somebody/​something:
    • Witnesses spoke of a great ball of flame.
    cite (formal) to mention something as a reason or an example, or in order to support what you are saying:
    • He cited his heavy workload as the reason for his breakdown.
    quote to mention an example of something to support what you are saying:
    • Can you quote me an instance of when this happened?
    cite or quote?You can cite reasons or examples, but you can only quote examples: He quoted his heavy workload as the reason for his breakdown. Cite is a more formal word than quote and is often used in more formal situations, for example in descriptions of legal cases.Patterns
    • to mention/​refer to/​speak of/​cite/​quote somebody/​something as somebody/​something
    • to mention/​refer to/​cite/​quote a(n) example/​instance/​case of something
    • frequently/​often mentioned/​referred to/​spoken of/​cited/​quoted
    • the example mentioned/​referred to/​cited/​quoted above/​earlier/​previously
    Extra Examples
    • He quoted one case in which a person had died in a fire.
    • the most widely quoted and influential study in this field
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • frequently
    • often
    preposition
    • as
    • on
    phrases
    • widely quoted
    See full entry
  4. give price

  5. [transitive, intransitive] to tell a customer how much money you will charge them for a job, service or product
    • quote something The agent is quoting a guide price of €250 000.
    • quote something for (doing) something The price they quoted for the kitchen was too high.
    • quote somebody something A garage quoted him £80.
    • quote somebody something for (doing) something They quoted us £300 for installing a shower unit.
  6. [transitive] quote something (at something) (finance) to give a market price for shares, gold or foreign money
    • Yesterday the pound was quoted at $1.8285, unchanged from Monday.
    Topics Moneyc1
  7. [transitive] quote something (finance) to give the prices for a business company’s shares on a stock exchange
    • Several football clubs are now quoted on the Stock Exchange.
    • publicly quoted companies
    Topics Moneyc1
  8. Word Originlate Middle English: from medieval Latin quotare, from quot ‘how many’, or from medieval Latin quota. The original sense was ‘mark a book with numbers, or with marginal references’, later ‘give a reference by page or chapter’, hence ‘cite a text or person’ (late 16th cent.).
Idioms
quote (… unquote)
(also quote, unquote)
  1. (informal) used to show the beginning (and end) of a word, phrase, etc. that has been said or written by somebody else
    • It was quote, ‘the hardest decision of my life’, unquote, and one that he lived to regret.
    • now that the, quote, unquote, ‘real story’ has begun
See quote in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee quote in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English

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