Submit your own quote here. You have the opportunity to inspire others with your own CULT Quotes.

RULES FOR SUBMISSION
  • Make Sure you are submitting your own Quotes.
  • Mention Title same as Content. Title and Content is required.
  • Write your Name and Country along with Your Own Quotes.
  • No Website Links are allowed.
  • Admin have all rights to delete post If adult content or Spam.
  • You don’t have to pay anything to publish your quote
  • Do not express your opinion/ feedback/ suggestion here.
  • Your Quote should not contain any marketing pitch for products or services.
  • Your photograph should be in JPEG/TIFF format and the minimum dimension of the photograph should be 200 pixels (width) X 200 pixels (height).
  • The content of this website is provided for information purposes only. The CULTQuotes editor does not accept any liability for the accuracy or authenticity of the content of the website.

❌ We receive hundreds of quotes per day so the review and publication of your request can take 1 to 2 weeks, you receive an email confirmation of the acceptance of your request.

❌ It’s perfectly okay to quote an excerpt of another author’s work in your writing, but it’s not always okay to do so without permission. If you don’t want to be sued for copyright infringement, it’s important to know when you need permission and when you don’t. And that’s not always obvious. Even the U.S. Copyright Office acknowledges how difficult it can be to determine when you need permission to quote:

The distinction between what is fair use and what is infringement in a particular case will not always be clear or easily defined. There is no specific number of words, lines, or notes that may safely be taken without permission.

When Do You Need To Get Permission To Use Quotes? 

Copyright is a form of protection for creative and original works, and U.S. copyright is automatic the moment that work is formed into a “tangible form of expression” such as written on disk or paper, or recorded.

This work—whether it’s a song, sketch, or short story—is intellectual property, protected by copyright as long as it can be viewed (or communicated) in a fixed form. Reproducing copyrighted work without permission is copyright infringement.

So, when do you need permission to quote song lyrics or poems or excerpts from novels in your writing? The answer is: If quoting without permission results in copyright infringement, then you need to get permission.

If you want to quote a small piece of someone else’s material in your work—whether it’s song lyrics, poems, excerpts from novels or interviews, photographs, or material from the Internet—you must credit the source, even if you plan to use only one or two lines of a song or poem.

But keep in mind that acknowledging the source of the copyrighted material is not a substitute for acquiring permission from the copyright owner.