You open a blank post, a slide deck, or a journal page. One well-chosen line often carries more weight than a paragraph of setup. This picker pulls attributed quotations from a maintained index so you spend less time searching quote sites.
Quotes appear here
Pick mood and length on the left, then generate.
A quotation is rarely neutral. The same sentence reads as brave on a Monday stand-up slide and preachy on a breakup thread.
Random selection forces distance. You react to words you did not write, which is useful when you need a prompt, not a sermon.
Each result passes through a small chain: your filters narrow a curated bank, a random pick runs against what remains, then the page renders one or more lines with mood and length tags attached.
Your filters
Mood, length, count. Leave fields open when you want surprise.
Pool match
Only rows tagged with your mood and length stay in the draw.
Random pick
The tool shuffles what remains so repeats within one batch stay rare.
Your panel
Lines land in the results card, ready to copy or download.
Social feeds reward repetition. The same Churchill line appears on three accounts before lunch. A random draw from a filtered index breaks the pattern without sending you down a Pinterest rabbit hole.
Writers use a single quotation as a constraint: react in 200 words, argue against the premise, or rewrite the idea in plain speech. Newsletter editors pair a short wisdom line with a longer essay hook. ESL teachers paste a medium-length quote and ask students to paraphrase without losing tone.
Momentum, not authority.
When you need raw sentence material instead of attributed wisdom, the random sentence generator sits closer to grammar drills. For proverb-style compression from many cultures, try the random proverb generator. Fiction writers sometimes chain a quote with the book title generator to sketch a theme before drafting.
Famous lines travel with messy histories. A quote attributed to Einstein on the internet might trace to a misremembered interview. Our index stores a common attribution for each row, which helps social posts look polished, but we do not verify primary sources the way a scholarly archive would.
That gap matters before you publish.
If you are writing academic work, citing a random picker is the wrong tool. For Instagram captions, journal prompts, or slide footnotes in an internal deck, the attribution field saves typing. Toggle it off when you want the words to stand alone as a writing prompt.
Party hosts who want playful one-liners with lucky numbers might prefer the fortune cookie generator. Discussion leaders who need a question instead of a statement often switch to the random topic generator once the quote has warmed the room.
The trade-off worth naming early
This index is curated, not infinite. You will not get niche industry jargon, hyper-local references, or freshly minted viral lines. Narrow filters shrink the pool; generating eight leadership quotes twice in one session might repeat a line. For placeholder body text without attribution baggage, the random paragraph generator fills space without pretending to be wisdom.
Length filters exist because context has a word budget. A short line fits a phone lock screen. A long line works as an epigraph if your layout has room. Medium sits in the awkward middle where most feed algorithms truncate anyway, which makes those quotes useful for testing how much survives a preview pane.
We recommend scanning the full results list even when you only need one winner. The first line is not always the best fit for your audience.
Attribution, repeats, and privacy.
No. We store widely circulated attributions to save you typing, but the tool is built for prompts and casual sharing, not footnotes in academic papers. Check a primary source before publishing anything that requires precise citation.
Random means independent events, not guaranteed novelty forever. With only one mood selected and a count of eight, the pool is finite. Widen to All moods or generate fewer lines per batch if variety matters more than speed.
No. Copy and download actions stay in your browser unless you paste the text somewhere else yourself.
Short lines survive preview panes on most platforms. Long lines work when you have room for an epigraph or a carousel slide with minimal design. Medium length is the hardest to place cleanly; test both before you schedule.