I think the short answer is that ISO lawyers aren’t ever going to come after you for quoting some short excerpt from an ISO standard in a Stack Overflow answer. So in practice, it’s effectively OK.
Officially though, I think all ISO standards have a boilerplate copyright/license statement that reads:
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, no part of this
publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means,
electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and microfilm,
without permission in writing from either ISO at the address below or
ISO's member body in the country of the requester.
So as far as what they are trying to assert there (*”no part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means”) it’s not strictly OK to even quote short excerpts from them.
So I think the official ISO position on quoting anything from their standards is essentially that in all cases you’re supposed to write to them and ask. Which of course is ridiculous for something like the case of citing some language from a standard in an answer you post to Stack Overflow. But as far as I can see, ISO doesn’t really acknowledge the possibility of such cases.
Instead, the ISO basically seems consistent in taking a hard line on use of anything they assert a copyright on. The copyright statement for their web site is this:
All content on ISO Online is copyright protected. The copyright is owned by ISO. Any use of the content, including copying of it in whole or in part, for example to another Internet site, is prohibited and would require written permission from ISO.
So I think that’s another data point which indicates that as far as your question “Is it okay to quote from ISO standards?”, an ISO lawyer would say No, it’s not OK.
However that doesn’t mean it’s not OK, because in practice. copyright enforcement in a lot of countries provides for individual rights for limited use of material no matter how much of a hard line the rights holders try to assert over the material.
(But as far as fair use, I think “fair use” itself as a term is mostly a US-specific thing and fair use isn’t an internationally recognized right. Some countries basically don’t recognize it as a right at all.)