
Top 14 Kuhrassen Quotes
#1. Whatever else we may say about sex, it is at least as much a social and psychological phenomenon as it is a biological one.
Lillian B. Rubin
#2. I think sequels should be earned and we won't do it unless the script is better than the first one.
Jay Roach
#3. We have too many cellphones. We've got too many internets. We have got to get rid of those machines. We have too many machines now.
Ray Bradbury
#4. [She] did not reply. She didn't want to talk to anyone. She just wanted to listen to what her bewildered heart was telling her.
Cornelia Funke
#5. How it pours, pours, pours,
In a never-ending sheet!
How it drives beneath the doors!
How it soaks the passer's feet!
How it rattles on the shutter!
How it rumples up the lawn!
How 'twill sigh, and moan, and mutter,
From darkness until dawn.
Rossiter Johnson
#7. Oh no," she said, still smiling; her eyes poured over with light, that of compassion. She understood how he felt, that this was not an impulse only. But the answer was still no, and, he knew, it would always
Philip K. Dick
#8. We are all part of the human family and we should be about doing what all good families do - caring for our less fortunate brothers and sisters.
Dan O'Neill
#9. Early on, I was so impressed with Charles Dickens. I grew up in the South, in a little village in Arkansas, and the whites in my town were really mean, and rude. Dickens, I could tell, wouldn't be a man who would curse me out and talk to me rudely.
Maya Angelou
#10. Some people miss flesh as a drunkard misses his dram ...
John Muir
#11. Would it be all right? Would it be all right to go ahead and feel? Go ahead and count on something?
Toni Morrison
#12. A good banker isn't careless with pennies; a good leader isn't sloppy about details.
John Wooden
#13. More guilt, guilt, guilt. That's the Irish condition.
Adrian McKinty
#14. In the course of nearly a century of gusty living he had been broke many times, had several times been wealthier than he now was; he regarded both conditions as he did shifts in the weather, and never counted his change.
Robert A. Heinlein
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