What does paperwork mean in this sentence?
“What the world really needs is more love and less paperwork.”
—Pearl Bailey (United States singer 1918-1990)
One teacher said, “paperwork” in this sentence meant “marriage certificate”. But I’m not sure about it.
I checked on dictionaries and find that the word means “routine work involving documents such as forms, records, or letters”. To my understanding, it doesn’t necessarily mean “marriage certificate”.
I searched on internet, but can’t find a certain answer. Therefore I put this question here.
Does it mean marriage certificate in this sentence? If not what does it mean?
Thanks in advance!
meaning
New contributor
add a comment |
“What the world really needs is more love and less paperwork.”
—Pearl Bailey (United States singer 1918-1990)
One teacher said, “paperwork” in this sentence meant “marriage certificate”. But I’m not sure about it.
I checked on dictionaries and find that the word means “routine work involving documents such as forms, records, or letters”. To my understanding, it doesn’t necessarily mean “marriage certificate”.
I searched on internet, but can’t find a certain answer. Therefore I put this question here.
Does it mean marriage certificate in this sentence? If not what does it mean?
Thanks in advance!
meaning
New contributor
And why would the dictionary answer not work? It works fine. Of course, it does not mean marriage certificate per se. It means all the stuff we all do in our lives and work that is "routine work involving" etc.
– Lambie
3 hours ago
add a comment |
“What the world really needs is more love and less paperwork.”
—Pearl Bailey (United States singer 1918-1990)
One teacher said, “paperwork” in this sentence meant “marriage certificate”. But I’m not sure about it.
I checked on dictionaries and find that the word means “routine work involving documents such as forms, records, or letters”. To my understanding, it doesn’t necessarily mean “marriage certificate”.
I searched on internet, but can’t find a certain answer. Therefore I put this question here.
Does it mean marriage certificate in this sentence? If not what does it mean?
Thanks in advance!
meaning
New contributor
“What the world really needs is more love and less paperwork.”
—Pearl Bailey (United States singer 1918-1990)
One teacher said, “paperwork” in this sentence meant “marriage certificate”. But I’m not sure about it.
I checked on dictionaries and find that the word means “routine work involving documents such as forms, records, or letters”. To my understanding, it doesn’t necessarily mean “marriage certificate”.
I searched on internet, but can’t find a certain answer. Therefore I put this question here.
Does it mean marriage certificate in this sentence? If not what does it mean?
Thanks in advance!
meaning
meaning
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 4 hours ago
user73344user73344
61
61
New contributor
New contributor
And why would the dictionary answer not work? It works fine. Of course, it does not mean marriage certificate per se. It means all the stuff we all do in our lives and work that is "routine work involving" etc.
– Lambie
3 hours ago
add a comment |
And why would the dictionary answer not work? It works fine. Of course, it does not mean marriage certificate per se. It means all the stuff we all do in our lives and work that is "routine work involving" etc.
– Lambie
3 hours ago
And why would the dictionary answer not work? It works fine. Of course, it does not mean marriage certificate per se. It means all the stuff we all do in our lives and work that is "routine work involving" etc.
– Lambie
3 hours ago
And why would the dictionary answer not work? It works fine. Of course, it does not mean marriage certificate per se. It means all the stuff we all do in our lives and work that is "routine work involving" etc.
– Lambie
3 hours ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
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oldest
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You need context to be entirely sure. I haven't been able to find the context in which Pearl Bailey said this quote.
On its own, the sentence is not inherently about marriage, and paperwork does not literally ever mean 'a marriage certificate'.
However, it could be using 'paperwork' as a metaphor for the act and state of marriage.
What the world needs is for people to worry more about whether people love each other than the details of whether they are legally married.
Not sure why this was downvoted. Care to explain?
– fred2
3 hours ago
I would add: "marriage certificate" is sometimes called "paper(s)", as in: "it is not papers that keep us together". So, even without a broader context available, marriage was not intended to be implied. "Paperwork" is about bureaucracy, not about a document. +1
– virolino
29 mins ago
add a comment |
You may refer to this link for more details on the quote.
https://philosiblog.com/2012/02/28/what-the-world-really-needs-is-more-love-and-less-paper-work/
Since you're specifically asking about the word paperwork, I'd agree with fred2. It really depends on the context. However, the word generally means something like documents, reports, etc. It could be an official document or a book report.
At the start of the quote is "What the world really needs". This suggests that "love" in this context does not mean romantic love between two people, but rather a warm and helpful kind of love, like the love between you and your parents.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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You need context to be entirely sure. I haven't been able to find the context in which Pearl Bailey said this quote.
On its own, the sentence is not inherently about marriage, and paperwork does not literally ever mean 'a marriage certificate'.
However, it could be using 'paperwork' as a metaphor for the act and state of marriage.
What the world needs is for people to worry more about whether people love each other than the details of whether they are legally married.
Not sure why this was downvoted. Care to explain?
– fred2
3 hours ago
I would add: "marriage certificate" is sometimes called "paper(s)", as in: "it is not papers that keep us together". So, even without a broader context available, marriage was not intended to be implied. "Paperwork" is about bureaucracy, not about a document. +1
– virolino
29 mins ago
add a comment |
You need context to be entirely sure. I haven't been able to find the context in which Pearl Bailey said this quote.
On its own, the sentence is not inherently about marriage, and paperwork does not literally ever mean 'a marriage certificate'.
However, it could be using 'paperwork' as a metaphor for the act and state of marriage.
What the world needs is for people to worry more about whether people love each other than the details of whether they are legally married.
Not sure why this was downvoted. Care to explain?
– fred2
3 hours ago
I would add: "marriage certificate" is sometimes called "paper(s)", as in: "it is not papers that keep us together". So, even without a broader context available, marriage was not intended to be implied. "Paperwork" is about bureaucracy, not about a document. +1
– virolino
29 mins ago
add a comment |
You need context to be entirely sure. I haven't been able to find the context in which Pearl Bailey said this quote.
On its own, the sentence is not inherently about marriage, and paperwork does not literally ever mean 'a marriage certificate'.
However, it could be using 'paperwork' as a metaphor for the act and state of marriage.
What the world needs is for people to worry more about whether people love each other than the details of whether they are legally married.
You need context to be entirely sure. I haven't been able to find the context in which Pearl Bailey said this quote.
On its own, the sentence is not inherently about marriage, and paperwork does not literally ever mean 'a marriage certificate'.
However, it could be using 'paperwork' as a metaphor for the act and state of marriage.
What the world needs is for people to worry more about whether people love each other than the details of whether they are legally married.
answered 3 hours ago
fred2fred2
1,065510
1,065510
Not sure why this was downvoted. Care to explain?
– fred2
3 hours ago
I would add: "marriage certificate" is sometimes called "paper(s)", as in: "it is not papers that keep us together". So, even without a broader context available, marriage was not intended to be implied. "Paperwork" is about bureaucracy, not about a document. +1
– virolino
29 mins ago
add a comment |
Not sure why this was downvoted. Care to explain?
– fred2
3 hours ago
I would add: "marriage certificate" is sometimes called "paper(s)", as in: "it is not papers that keep us together". So, even without a broader context available, marriage was not intended to be implied. "Paperwork" is about bureaucracy, not about a document. +1
– virolino
29 mins ago
Not sure why this was downvoted. Care to explain?
– fred2
3 hours ago
Not sure why this was downvoted. Care to explain?
– fred2
3 hours ago
I would add: "marriage certificate" is sometimes called "paper(s)", as in: "it is not papers that keep us together". So, even without a broader context available, marriage was not intended to be implied. "Paperwork" is about bureaucracy, not about a document. +1
– virolino
29 mins ago
I would add: "marriage certificate" is sometimes called "paper(s)", as in: "it is not papers that keep us together". So, even without a broader context available, marriage was not intended to be implied. "Paperwork" is about bureaucracy, not about a document. +1
– virolino
29 mins ago
add a comment |
You may refer to this link for more details on the quote.
https://philosiblog.com/2012/02/28/what-the-world-really-needs-is-more-love-and-less-paper-work/
Since you're specifically asking about the word paperwork, I'd agree with fred2. It really depends on the context. However, the word generally means something like documents, reports, etc. It could be an official document or a book report.
At the start of the quote is "What the world really needs". This suggests that "love" in this context does not mean romantic love between two people, but rather a warm and helpful kind of love, like the love between you and your parents.
add a comment |
You may refer to this link for more details on the quote.
https://philosiblog.com/2012/02/28/what-the-world-really-needs-is-more-love-and-less-paper-work/
Since you're specifically asking about the word paperwork, I'd agree with fred2. It really depends on the context. However, the word generally means something like documents, reports, etc. It could be an official document or a book report.
At the start of the quote is "What the world really needs". This suggests that "love" in this context does not mean romantic love between two people, but rather a warm and helpful kind of love, like the love between you and your parents.
add a comment |
You may refer to this link for more details on the quote.
https://philosiblog.com/2012/02/28/what-the-world-really-needs-is-more-love-and-less-paper-work/
Since you're specifically asking about the word paperwork, I'd agree with fred2. It really depends on the context. However, the word generally means something like documents, reports, etc. It could be an official document or a book report.
At the start of the quote is "What the world really needs". This suggests that "love" in this context does not mean romantic love between two people, but rather a warm and helpful kind of love, like the love between you and your parents.
You may refer to this link for more details on the quote.
https://philosiblog.com/2012/02/28/what-the-world-really-needs-is-more-love-and-less-paper-work/
Since you're specifically asking about the word paperwork, I'd agree with fred2. It really depends on the context. However, the word generally means something like documents, reports, etc. It could be an official document or a book report.
At the start of the quote is "What the world really needs". This suggests that "love" in this context does not mean romantic love between two people, but rather a warm and helpful kind of love, like the love between you and your parents.
answered 3 hours ago
PuffyPuffy
5077
5077
add a comment |
add a comment |
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And why would the dictionary answer not work? It works fine. Of course, it does not mean marriage certificate per se. It means all the stuff we all do in our lives and work that is "routine work involving" etc.
– Lambie
3 hours ago