Top 14 Euro Historical Quotes
#1. You can't run a business based on sympathies; otherwise our business would be hampered.
Marc Rich
#2. First thing I do in the morning, after I have my breakfast and do my spiritual work, is put on my makeup and fix my hair, and I can do my makeup in 15 minutes.
Dolly Parton
#3. The ignorant one does not see his ignorance as he basks in its darkness; nor does the knowledgeable one see his own knowledge, for he basks in its light
Ibn Arabi
#4. One of my earliest memories is of bashing the keyboard with my hands, my chubby little baby hands, and I remember the sound hitting my face. It became my toy.
Christian McKay
#5. It occurred to me several times that we should have got on better, if we had not been quite so genteel. We were so exceedingly genteel, that our scope was very limited.
Charles Dickens
#6. There is a mass of people, we might as well admit, who if they weren't watching television, would be doing absolutely nothing else.
Bennett Cerf
#7. The Goal of Science is understanding lawful relations among natural phenomena.
Religion is a way of life within a larger framework of meaning.
Ian Barbour
#8. The strange thing about television is that it doesn't tell you everything.
Walter Tevis
#9. Nothing is more dangerous than the well-meant efforts of the younger generation to assist you and show their sympathy.
Agatha Christie
#10. Look, how they scold me for all my loving and tippling, now that the silvery edges shine forth from my brow!
Abu Yahya Al-Libi
#11. When I was little, I would always lie about the stupidest things. In kindergarten or first grade, I would tell people I had tigers living in my attic and a room full of gold.
Kendall Jenner
#12. It's vital to establish some rituals-automatic but decisive patterns of behavior-at the beginning of the creative process, when you are most at peril of turning back, chickening out, giving up, or going the wrong way.
Twyla Tharp
#13. Vitrine. Upstairs his wife runs a vacuum cleaner; he can
Anthony Doerr
#14. For, besides what has been said, it should be borne in mind that the temper of the multitude is fickle, and that while it is easy to persuade them of a thing, it is hard to fix them in that persuasion
Niccolo Machiavelli
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