Top 14 Catchy Sorority Sayings
#1. ...books were portals into worlds she yearned to know, whether they be ponderous volumes crammed with accumulated knowledge or whimsical fantasies featuring magical creatures.
Kerry Alan Denney
#2. I wouldn't touch New Orleans with a ten-foot pole. That town is haunted as shit, and all the better for it. Nowhere in the world loves its ghosts more than that city.
Kendare Blake
#3. [Corneille] was inspired by Roman authors and Roman spirit, Racine with delicacy by the polished court of Louis XIV.
Horace Walpole
#4. The meaning of culture is nothing less than the conduct of life itself, fortified, thickened, made more crafty and subtle, by contact with books and with art.
John Cowper Powys
#5. It was reality TV that convinced SILAS he would need to annihilate humanity in order to go on living.
Nick Cole
#6. Your art kind of changes as you get older, by nature of the fact that you're hopefully gaining wisdom and you're starting to watch things with a better overview.
Sheryl Crow
#7. The human currency of praise is Monopoly money. It feels great for a moment to collect, but when the game is over, it's worthless.
Yasmin Mogahed
#8. One of the things that I've been doing recently in my scientific research is to ask this question: Is the universe actually capable of performing things like digital computations?
Seth Lloyd
#9. What you really want to do is sit down and find a place that you can control government spending and raise more revenue.
Kevin McCarthy
#10. The Necromancer's Tower squatted over the river like an incontinent titan.
Yahtzee Croshaw
#11. You might be a redneck if you work with a shirt off ... and so does your husband.
Jeff Foxworthy
#12. How much would you want to stand at the wrong end of a shooting gallery?
Groucho Marx
#13. Stop," cried the traveler. "What God does is well done. Do not claim to know more than He. God has given organs to this frail creature; let them develop and grow strong by exercise, use, experience, and liberty.
Frederic Bastiat
#14. When a thoughtful human being has overcome incentives to vice and is aware of having done his bitter duty, he finds himself in a state that could be called happiness, a state of contentment and peace of mind in which virtue is its own reward.
Immanuel Kant
Famous Authors
Popular Topics
Scroll to Top