This quote carries quite a few assumptions. As stated, it means that dreams are given to the dreamer by a supernatural being that also provides the dreamer with the ability to make the dream manifest in the real world. However, the quote does NOT distinguish a "dream" that occurs during sleep from a "dream" in the sense of a hope or goal for the future. The quote does not specify who the giver of dreams might be or how that giver also provides power to make dreams come true. There is nothing about this quote to indicate that it is anything but a pretty sentiment of the sort commonly found on greeting cards.
The speech was I have a dream.
i think that we should love the fact of him ok hear is the right quote "Now it the time to make real the promises of democracy."
in the speech "I Have A Dream"
Depending on the quote, any quote can be used as a guide to ethical behavior, if that's what its message is. Jews do not have a monopoly on guiding quotes.
Dream quote's are people's dreams that have been put in text.They can have sentimental meanings.Dream quote can also be thought of to maybe have a dream that's yet to be filled.
It's called the "I have a dream" speech. The most famous quote is "We Shall overcome." Some consider "I have a dream" to be the most famous quote from that speech.
The Lion the Witch and the wardrobe.
dream now before it is to late
"I dream for a living!"
I have a dream
I have a dream
"Are you sure that we are awake? It seems to me that yet we sleep, we dream." -William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream.
"I had a dream."
I had a dream...
"I have a dream."
"The American dream of rags to riches is a dream for a reason - it is hard to achieve; were everyone to do it, it wouldn't be a dream but would rather be reality."