I think you can say either.
Both "reads" and "says" can be used interchangeably when referring to a quote. It's just a matter of personal preference or style.
he usually says shawty
is that a question, or are you asking what that says translated?translated it reads: What I say about Bizet?
The quote on Karl Marx's statue in Highgate Cemetery, London, reads "Workers of all lands unite."
Not quite clear why you ask for 'a quote that says', but'Do not come to strangers' houses' = 'No ven a las casas de extranjeros'
well... A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM. the whole quote reads: "And yet, to say the truth, reason and love keep little company together nowadays." act III scene i
Jackline willson says she can't decieds which book is the best but says the illistrated mum is the saddest she never reads books after she writes them.
"Music is the universal language of mankind." - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
she says and i quote:" longbottom isn't it?... hows mum and dad..."
"She reads" in French is "elle lit".
It Says; Here We Mark The Price Of Freedom
That would an ambigram. That is, if your question meant to say "reads as one word one way, and says something else upside-down."
The quote "This is Sparta" is said by King Leonidas, played by actor Gerard Butler, in the movie "300" directed by Zack Snyder.