Top 14 Btob Song Quotes
#1. Run the Race till the End, Even the result already known to be negative.
Giridhar Alwar
#2. But there was no use pretending: I was not the sort of person who counted blessings; I was the sort of person for whom there could never be enough blessings.
Jamaica Kincaid
#3. I seem to have a one-track mind, and that track leads straight to the two things I shouldn't even be thinking about right now. Her boobs. Both of them.
Colleen Hoover
#4. Ask Bill [Gates] why the string in function 9 is terminated by a dollar sign. Ask him, because he can't answer, only I know that.
Gary Kildall
#5. You're very powerful, Clara," Dad says. "Even for a Triplare, you're remarkable. Your connection is strong and steady.
Cynthia Hand
#6. Slavery is founded in the selfishness of man's nature, opposition to it in his love of justice. These principles are an eternal antagonism, and when brought into collision so fiercely as slavery extension brings them, shocks and throes and convulsions must ceaselessly follow.
Abraham Lincoln
#7. But you can't feel bad every second[ ... ] Laughing doesn't make bad thing worse any more than crying makes them better. It doesn't mean you don't care, or that you've forgotten. It just means you're human. But i didn't know how to say this, either.
Ransom Riggs
#8. The sensation of being so close to another human being with whom I had not one single sensation in common left me speechless.
Elaine Dundy
#9. American natives were thought to be a simple, malleable people who, once they came to understand the benefits of European faith and civilization, would embrace them.
Landon Y. Jones
#11. There the beloved red sweater,
bright tangle of necklace, earrings of amber.
Each confirming: I chose these, I.
But habit is different: it chooses.
And we, it's good horse,
opening our mouths at even the sight of the bit.
Jane Hirshfield
#12. I always believed in my characters. I lived them.
Irene Dunne
#14. [A difficult childhood gave me] a kind of cocky confidence ... I could never have so little that I hadn't had less. It took away my fear.
Jacqueline Cochran
Famous Authors
Popular Topics
Scroll to Top