A Quote by Saoirse Ronan

The majority of teenagers don't even make eye contact with people, even people of the same age. — © Saoirse Ronan
The majority of teenagers don't even make eye contact with people, even people of the same age.
Eye contact made people think you were being truthful even if you weren't.
If you see a gaggle of teenagers walking towards you, you tend not to make eye contact, because you know they're going to recognise you. You learn to adapt: 99.999 per cent of people aren't looking to be harmful or unpleasant; they just want something, a photograph or an autograph.
I can't even talk to someone and make eye contact.
Most of the musicians that I'm playing with now have jazz backgrounds, so they're comfortable with improvisation. And they all know to make eye contact with me, and I'll give them some kind of sign when I think that the song's ending. Or maybe I don't even have to, because they all sort of feel it at the same time.
If two people can love each other without even speaking the same language, age and numbers are even easier to overcome.
I have a problem with making eye contact with people, or with holding eye contact.
A lot of people think teenagers haven't gone through anything in their lives - they're not even 20 years old yet. But a twenty-something can go through the same type of experience or heartbreak that a 50-year-old can go through, so why does age matter?
I have a big thing with eye contact, because I think as soon as you make eye contact with somebody, you see them, and they become valued and worthy.
People simply don't make eye contact anymore.
In London, people can be so... well, it's not even a case of people being unkind or unfriendly. You just don't make any contact in London. You go from A to B with your eyes on the pavement.
I think that young people - teenagers, college-age people, anyone under the age of 30 - know when they're being pandered to.
In London, people don't make eye contact; it's almost too provocative.
I can't make eye contact when people sing 'Happy Birthday' to me.
As any speaker will tell you, when you address a large number of people from a stage, you try to make eye contact with people in the audience to communicate that you're accessible and interested in them.
All too often, I will see people on the left slam Trump for the way he treats or talks about other people. Then those same individuals - sometimes even in the same breath - will go on to say even worse things about the people who voted for him.
The trick is not to make eye contact. They don't charge if you don't make eye contact.
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