Stutter Quotes

Discover the best quotes about Stutter. This collection showcases wisdom and insights on Stutter from various authors and personalities.

Sometimes you have to stutter step; sometimes you have to spin inside. You have to run some games.
I had a stutter 'till... I still do today. I just work on it a lot. I obsess, if you will, with it, but I stuttered throughout my childhood.
People don't know. People are ignorant. They feel that if you stutter, then you're slow or whatnot.
I had a stutter when I was a young. I went to speech therapy.
My speech impediment wasn't a stutter but it was dropping several letters that I just could not say for several years, most specifically the 'r' sound.
I don't think I ever felt an outsider when I had a stutter.
I didn't stutter when I was reading lines in a script. When I got away from myself, I didn't have that problem.
I had a bad stutter when I was really young. I couldn't get a sentence out. Like, 'D-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-ad.' And that turned into a mumble.
Well, no, you can prepare it all you want, but I'd still stutter.
Rebecca Black might sing like a robot, but that's just proof she has evolved beyond us. Her vocal is just a slightly exaggerated version of the robot glitch-twitch stutter that's been mainstream pop vocalese for the past 10 years or so.
Liars do look you in the eye. They do not always stutter, stammer, blush or fidget.
You can hear me starting to stutter and slur my words.
It has always seemed a cruel joke to me that the very word 'stutter' is difficult for many stutterers to pronounce. It is onomatopoeic, an imitation of the halting, repetitive sound made by people with this speech dysfunction.
Sometimes, when I'm trying to get my thoughts out, and I'm thinking too fast, I stutter.
When I first started auditioning I would stutter a lot because I was so terribly frightened.
I used to not stutter any. Oh, I did when I was a kid, I stuttered, I had a bad stutter until I was probably between the second and third grade and a guy got rid of it for me.
I will always have a stutter.
If you're a kid, it's all you think about if you stutter. Kids can be so mean. My grades suffered. Class participation weighs heavy in grading, and I wouldn't open my mouth to read or talk in front of anyone.
I have such bad memories, sitting in the back of a classroom, being told, you know, everybody is going to read a paragraph, and skipping ahead to my paragraph and being mortified and trying to read it enough times so that I wouldn't stutter and stammer, getting called on, even in high school.
It's nothing to be ashamed of to have a stutter.