Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I love body language.
I see tendencies, I see body language.
I have my own style and my own body language.
I don't naturally have the body language of a software guy.
Body language is more fascinating to me than actual language.
That's something I'm trying to be better at, fix my body language.
Naturally, my body language changes given whatever environment I'm in.
I think my body language and how I carry myself speaks for me as a person.
Never ask a woman if you may kiss her. Instead, learn to read body language.
My body language, it doesn't have anything to do with my coaches or my teammates.
Bharathirajaa taught me everything, from body language to emoting with one's eyes.
% of what you understand in a conversation is read through the body, not the words.
I don't act. I am the way I am, and choose roles that I think suit my body language.
Body language and tone of voice - not words - are our most powerful assessment tools.
Part of being out there, campaigning, talking to people, is being able to read body language.
In a costume, you need very exaggerated body language - as you say, sort of mime-type skills.
I assume the body language no matter what in doing voiceover. There is a transformative aspect.
I think reading a room - reading the personalities, reading body language - is kind of a lost art.
I love the body language of the women cricketers and the attitude with which they carry themselves.
I can tell by body language who wants a shot and who's going to make it and who's going to take a bad shot.
Before you get into the mind, you have to inhabit the physicality. Body language is a great way of speaking.
I kind of do this awkward body language because, growing up, I had a really hard time expressing myself vocally.
The deaf community relies so much on eye contact, expression and body language. It's such a huge part of who we are.
I like Robo Shankar - he evokes laughter, he has a unique body language and style. I loved all scenes of his in 'Maari.'
It's not brain surgery. I focus on getting the costumes right, getting the body language. I do what I can with the makeup.
Comedy is more an art of body language and gestures - it is more a performance of an artist than the lines given to him/her.
What was old can be brought back new, and I bring that to the table. I bring mannerisms, facials, body language, positioning.
I believe every person has a story that comes out from the way they talk, their opinion, their mindset and their body language.
I trained to become a sign-language interpreter because it helps you read physical expression and the emotions of body language.
Maybe Trump isn't a racist in private. But he's sure acting like one in public. And his body language is corroborating the evidence.
I don't think people are going to talk in the future. They're going to communicate through eye contact, body language, emojis, signs.
A stylist understands our body language; they know what works and what doesn't. I'm happy this concept has caught on in the South film industry.
I had never really done voice-over. If you've ever seen me, I'm more the communicator through body language and movement... I'm a physical actor.
Language is a more recent technology. Your body language, your eyes, your energy will come through to your audience before you even start speaking.
I come from a place where everything about me, even my body language, is saying: I mean you no harm. I smile, I laugh. Basic stuff for most people.
As a journalist, I've been a professional watcher, picking up the body language and verbal tics that make us individuals and interesting to others.
A shoe is not only a design, but it's a part of your body language, the way you walk. The way you're going to move is quite dictated by your shoes.
Everything changes when I dance... I am a taskmaster there. I am the creator. I am high on dance - my expression, body language... I am like a fire.
There's something about studying body language and non-spoken emotion - I know the innate response. But to really study it like a science would be fun.
I think, as an athlete, you tend to be cautious of your body language and what you're doing on the ice. That might be the only moment someone sees you.
Since one of my roles is that of a con man, I actually mingled with a few pickpockets in north Chennai to get a hang of their body language and mindset.
I think when you play with the same defence, you sort of understand each other's body language, and you read off each other, and it's much, much better.
Content is getting its due respect. Our audience wants to see characters on screen and want to see actors play new roles, adapt different body language.
What I really like doing is storytelling, finding the body language that is necessary for the story. And when I'm doing it and it's working, I'm thrilled.
People need realness, reality. People can sense when someone is being pretentious or fake. It's because you feel it; you see it in someone's body language.
In this respect I suppose I'm the total opposite of Garry. With his very emotive body language at the board he shows and displays all his emotions. I don't.
I was really interested in observing people. From a young age, I wouldn't listen to what an adult was saying - I was obsessed with other people's body language.
I've always really been interested in observing people's postures, the way they speak with their hands, the way they communicate things with their body language.
For me, actors have to have a character, an aura, body language. They're not models. They used to call actors models. But I want them to participate in the film.
Being a person of the armed forces is not easy. Performing it is also not easy. There is a sense of discipline and body language that you need to have throughout.