Top 15 Nullus Quotes
#1. Nullus est liber tam malus ut non aliqua parte prosit - There is no book so bad that it is not profitable on some part.
Pliny The Younger
#3. If a man wants his dreams to come true he must wake up.
Habeeb Akande
#4. There is no book so bad that it is not profitable in some part. -Nullus est liber tam malus ut non aliqua parte prosit
Pliny The Younger
#5. I'm angry enough to set fire to a house just by looking at it ... I'm angry enough, at last, to stop being afraid of life, and angry enough ... before I die to fucking well live.
Claire Messud
#6. Enough can only be enough to those who believe it's enough.
Auliq Ice
#7. Ants do no bend their ways to empty barns, so no friend will visit the place of departed wealth.
[Lat., Horrea formicae tendunt ad inania nunquam
Nullus ad amissas ibit amicus opes.]
Ovid
#8. Believe the unbelievable. Dream the impossible. Never take 'No' for an answer!
Tony Fernandes
#9. The lively is always more contemplative than what is dead and sad.
Robert Walser
#10. Greeks were so much a part of the Roman world that, in the surviving texts, they are often more visible by the shadow they cast than by their actual written presence.
Elizabeth Speller
#11. Sometimes my feelings are so hot that I have to take the pen and put them out on paper to keep them from setting me afire inside; then all that ink and labor are wasted because I can't print the results
Mark Twain
#12. There is no grief which time does not lessen and soften.
[Lat., Nullus dolor est quem non longinquitas temporis minuat ac molliat.]
Marcus Tullius Cicero
#13. No one can be so welcome a guest that he will not become an annoyance when he has stayed three continuous days in a friend's house. [Lat., Hospes nullus tam in amici hospitium diverti potest, Quin ubi triduum continuum fuerit jam odiosus siet.
Plautus
#14. If a man does not know to what port he is steering, no wind is favorable to him. Ignoranti quem portum petat, nullus suus ventus est.
Seneca The Younger
#15. These are the things of which men think, who live: of their own selves and the dwelling place of their fathers; of their neighbors; of work and service; of rule and reason and women and children; of Beauty and Death and War.
W.E.B. Du Bois
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