Top 16 Appreciably Quotes
#1. It will be nearly impossible to slow warming appreciably without condemning much of the world to poverty unless energy sources that emit little or no carbon dioxide become competitive with conventional fossil fuels.
Henry Sylvester Jacoby
#2. As a matter of fact, she has refused to marry me."
"So when's the wedding?" Ramsey asked.
Julie Garwood
#3. Even if the gods are real, I don't think they can liberate us.
S.J. Sindu
#4. A bank is a place where they lend you an umbrella in fair weather and ask for it back when it begins to rain.
Robert Frost
#5. Women in general seem to me to be appreciably more intelligent than men. A great many of them suffer in silence from the imbecilities of their husbands.
H.L. Mencken
#6. With its Medicaid expansion, Obamacare may turn out to be the most equality-promoting policy enacted in a generation.
Timothy Noah
#7. Nothing could be more pleasant than to live in solitude, enjoy the spectacle of nature, and occasionally read some book ...
Nikolai Gogol
#8. Lenny Bruce described flamenco as being an art form wherein a dancer applauds his own ass.
David Rakoff
#9. The warmth and the passion in my veins are more than enough for a hundred thirsty girls.
M.F. Moonzajer
#10. A study of the history of wages back through the years indicates clearly that when the cost-of-living rises appreciably wages have shortly been adjusted upward also.
Charles E. Wilson
#11. Her heart was beating appreciably faster, and she took more rapid breaths, but she was enjoying herself. Adventuresses are born, not made.
Kerry Greenwood
#12. If only the picture could grow old, and I stay young. For that ... for that, I would give my SOUL for that.
Oscar Wilde
#13. The patients on Tuke Ward were a pleasant and tractable bunch and practised insanity with a certain elan.
Bill Bryson
#14. If human emotions largely result from thinking, then one may appreciably control one's feelings by controlling one's thoughts - or by changing the internalized sentences, or self-talk, with which one largely created the feeling in the first place.
Albert Ellis
#15. Every educated physician knows that most diseases are not appreciably helped by medicine.
Richard Clarke Cabot
#16. Illiteracy was the usual condition in sixteenth-century England, to be sure. According to one estimate at least 70 percent of men and 90 percent of women of the period couldn't even sign their names. But as one moved up the social scale, literacy rates rose appreciably.
Bill Bryson
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