Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Salford. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Salford Quotes And Sayings by 94 Authors including Sergio Aguero,Bill Buford,Lucy Powell,Noel Gallagher,Ian Holloway for you to enjoy and share.
I like it in Manchester. I thought it was going to be much colder, but it is not too bad. And my wife and son are happy here, too.
Gordon Ramsay grew up in a tourist town, Stratford-Upon-Avon, but in a part tourists don't visit - a council estate: a concrete bunker subsidized by the local government, synonymous with deprivation and blight.
Team GB's success at the Beijing Olympics can, in part, be said to have been made in Manchester. For example, all the cycling medal winners trained at Manchester's velodrome, the National Cycling Centre.
We like annoying people. It's a Manchester thing. It's a trait. We just like pissing people off.
I love Blackpool. We're very similar. We both look better in the dark.
I don't live in London - I'm based in Norfolk and have a place in Scotland.
You know Manchester is always a bit of a hard place for people coming from London, just with all the history. Manchester has this immensely huge and healthy history musically.
The country life near Manchester I really love.
Manchester has it's own pride and London has it's sort of pride and sometimes we can be a bit mean to each other, but I think if we dig the music we can get on really well.
People in Liverpool don't move very far, you know.
In Conisborough there's no Hoxton Square to bring a bit of light relief. It's just mile after mile of broken windows and the bloody Earth Centre.
I was born and bred in Coventry. I played for the club as well, so that's where my liaisons lie.
London, London, London town,
You can toughen up or get thrown around.
I took a train to Liverpool. they were having a festival when I arrived. Citizens had taken time off from their busy activities to add crisp packets, empty cigarette boxes and carrier-bags to the other wise bland and neglected landscape.
Really? Brixton? Where nobody speaks fucking English?" Okay, that wasn't quite fair, and supposedly Brixton was getting "gentrified." "Remember Guns of Brixton, the Clash?
Don't go on holiday to Blackpool, it's fucking horrible there.
It is a Lancashire custom to be on the defensive. We anticipate jokes about rain, "bi gum," and Wigan; we expect people to peer at us through the thin layer of smoke they fancy they see around our heads.
I come from the bottom of the ladder. I'm from Norwich. Not many people seem to know about it.
One has not great hopes from Birmingham. I always say there is something direful in the sound.
London; a nation, not a city.
For society, of all places I have ever been, Norwich is the best.
I feel close to the rebelliousness of the youth here. Perhaps time will seperate us , but nobody can deny that here, behind the windows of Manchester, there is an insane love of football, of celebration and of music.
Welcome to Glasgow - the city where we punch people who are on fire.
I think Liverpool generates generosity which rubs off - it's a good place to work and to party.
Glasgow has truly become my home away from home.
London, how could one ever be tired of it?
Both of the Villa scorers were born in Liverpool, as was the Villa manager, who was born in Birkenhead.
I am, and always will be, proud to be a Hackney girl.
I grew up in Yorkshire, and once or twice a year, we'd travel over the Pennines to see my cousins in Cheshire.
I'm from Southampton.
Oh yeah, I'm an Essex boy and proud of it.
Oh, I love Nottingham. I know some people go, 'Oh God, there's not much going off there,' but I like staying in and going round to my mum and dad's for a Sunday roast.
London is yours. If you want it.
Liverpool Football Club is the heartland of football folklore
Colchester, Ash, my captain, staking my body with his cock like a conqueror, like a king.
I love to be with my kid in Yorkshire. I love it there.
It shows a mediocre architect at the top of his game [on the Beetham Tower in Manchester]
I'm a Bristol person too, I lived in Bristol during the war.
ah've been on t'dole all mi life in fucking Leeds!
Liverpool will always be my home.
We must go to such towns as Bristol, York, and Norwich.
Edinburgh House. He had heard that in its industrial heyday, Corby had had
If you were going to choose a way of making your way in this world and a place to start from, you might not choose poetry and you might not choose Huddersfield.
Julian of Norwich,
It's really hard because obviously people label you as a British East Asian actor. And I'm just from Salford; it's where I was born.
Her mum was talking like the Queen. Well, the Queen's slightly rougher sister from Salford.
I don't know any Londoners 'cos I'm from Manchester.
I have no problem living in Liverpool, but I think my wife and daughters deserve to enjoy every day to the full and live their lives - but they have to be at home all day. My wife doesn't speak a word of English, so she depends 100% on me. I live here with them. That's my world, that's my life.
[...] if you're going to waste an opportunity, there are a few important things to remember. Do it in style. Do it in public. And, above all, do it in Manchester.
People do not realise that many of my works are done in urban places. I was brought up on the edge of Leeds, five miles from the city centre-on one side were fields and on the other, the city.
London gives birth to amazing talent but is rubbish at helping maintain it.
No one knows what it's like ... to be a dustbin ... in Shaftesbury ... with hooligans ...
Nigel Barton:Everyone says 'Up at Oxford'. You come 'down' when you've finished there.
Harry Barton: Well, what's this then? Does bloody Oxford move up and down the bloody map then?
There are stains on their knees, stains on their arses. Dirty Leeds.
Moving Mummy of Manchester has
I love Liverpool. The people are wonderful and I feel very much at home there.
Of course I didn't take my wife to see Rochdale as an anniversary present. It was her birthday and would I have got married during the football season? Anyway, it was Rochdale reserves.
When writing about Edinburgh, I place my characters in the parts of the city that I myself have lived in, or else know well, those being the Southside, Marchmont in particular, where I lived as a student, and the New Town/Stockbridge area where I live now and have done for the past 30 years.
Yesterday, some hooligans knocked over a dustbin in Shaftesbury.
England? England is in London right?
Starting off from Cranchester. All later events seem to have been wiped
The problems of the world are not going to be engaged with and solved in Faversham, they're going to be sorted out in cities like Birmingham.
I lived in Camden, Primrose Hill and Kentish Town for 10 years.
It's the worst yet. I'm in TEFL City.'
'TEFL City' because we called those times 'TEFL-pondering mornings', when your only option felt like emigration and teaching.
I'm born in Liverpool, I'm a Liverpool supporter.
Let any stranger find mee so pleasant a county, such good way, large heath, three such places as Norwich, Yar. and Lin. in any county of England, and I'll bee once again a vagabond to visit them.
Very nice sort of place, Oxford, I should think, for people that like that sort of place.
London: A place you go to get bronchitis.
Edinburgh used to be a haughty city.
I am a fellow commoner at Lucy Cavendish College. My husband used to be a lecturer at Leeds University, and we lived in Yorkshire for 11 years. When he gave up his job, we realised we could live wherever we liked.
West Yorkshire is quite dramatic and beautiful, the crags and things.
here you are in Bath, andBath-- Jane Austen
Remember the people in the back streets of Derby.
Hackney gets a bit of a bad rap, but it's the only place I've ever lived that felt like a community. I know my neighbours.
I love London. I'm a London fanatic. That's my city.
You can't go to East Anglia and not visit Sutton Hoo. Well, you can, obviously, but you shouldn't.
I used to say Edinburgh was a beautiful actress with no talent. I thought it was just like a shortbread tin. I think that's because I did six Festivals in a row there, and I never saw the real Edinburgh, just a lot of deeply annoying Cambridge Footlights kids wanting to be actresses.
I think that Liverpool's particular modern history lends itself to the cinema better than London in many ways. When you go to Liverpool, you absorb that whole sound and humour.
Come friendly bombs and fall on Slough!
It isn't fit for humans now,
There isn't grass to graze a cow.
Swarm over, Death!
Doncaster will hit Villa with fire and broomstick.
,000 people in Hampden Park. Of course they're all Scottish. Because no one else goes there. The English have an unwritten rule: they only go to places they might get back from.
The one thing that's hurt in my career is people saying I don't want to come out of Manchester to fight people.
In England, they say that Manchester is the city of rain. It's main attraction is considered to the timetable at the railway station, where trains leave for other, less rainy cities.
Liverpool will always be special for me: my daughter was born here.
I romanticised Mancunian despair, W says. I didn't realise that Mancunian despair is only the desire to leave Manchester
I know Camberwell very well: I used to go to Camberwell New Baths a lot and the cinema, which used to be the Odeon. My old school is around there too, though you've got to understand that I went to a lot of schools.
If you're from South London you feel like you're always trying to win people over, so perhaps that underdog passion comes through.
Perhaps to the north? I hear Scotland is lovely this time of year." "Are you barmy? Scotland is wholly abysmal this time of year.
I grew up in northwest London on a council estate. My parents are Irish immigrants who came over here when they were very young and worked in menial jobs all their lives, and I'm one of many siblings.
London doesn't love the latent or the lurking, has neither time, nor taste, nor sense for anything less discernible than the red flag in front of the steam-roller. It wants cash over the counter and letters ten feet high.
I divide my time between all the mud and open space in Surrey and the social life and work in London, particularly Chelsea, which still has the same village feel that it had in the swinging Sixties.
I want London to be a competitive, dynamic place to come to work.
In my time at Anfield we always said we had the best two teams on Merseyside - Liverpool and Liverpool reserves.
All we ever got in those [early] days was Where are you from? Liverpool? You'll have to be in London before you can do it. Nobody's ever done it from Liverpool.
Most cities have a centre surrounded by suburbs, but London has numerous centres: it's the model of a twenty-first century metropolis.
Manchester was a fantastic place to go out in. There were 10 clubs with world-class cabaret and comedians. You'd go in and Tom Jones might be singing, or Shirley Bassey or Engelbert Humperdinck.
I'd go back to Leeds at any time, but not right now
Edinburgh has history the way cats have bad breath.
In Sheffield, we need support from the community and for the community. We need integration with no loss of heritage, and a clear appreciation of what is and is not acceptable.
I grew up in Manchester, and we were very poor. My father was a miner who joined the Navy during the war and developed a lung disease and had to have a lung removed.