
Top 14 Primordiale Etimologia Quotes
#1. For us Indians, I don't think English can ever exude that magic of emotions which our mother tongue can.
Kailash Kher
#2. In interpreting a work of art, we draw upon our own aims and endeavors, inform it with a meaning that has its origin in our own ways of life and thought. In a word, any art that really affects us becomes to that extent modern art.
Arnold Hauser
#4. I'll be back so soon you won't have time to miss me. Look after my heart - I've left it with you. So
Stephenie Meyer
#5. By the end of that first day, the advance landing forces at Gallipoli had already suffered nearly four thousand casualties, or considerably more than the total number of men Lawrence had projected would be needed to secure Alexandretta.
Scott Anderson
#6. The life of a nation is secure only while the nation is honest, truthful, and virtuous.
Frederick Douglass
#7. God is not a luxury you can't afford; He's a necessity you truly cannot live without!
Monica Denise Brown
#8. Crave the small, tactile simplicity of my new Kindle Paperwhite in its purple leather cover, which is currently home to what would make up around three boxes of physical books, but whose screen's digital imprint is flattened of all memory and association. It's soulless and almost weightless.
Linda Grant
#9. You can't truly appreciate the top if you've never hit rock bottom.
Vanna B.
#10. The great novelist vibrated between two decanters with the regularity of a pendulum.
Louisa May Alcott
#11. If you don't learn to feed yourself, you wind up dumpster diving for someone else's leftovers.
Mark Hall
#12. Have wisdom in your actions and faith in your merits.
Yogi Bhajan
#13. In the present moment, you are beyond all definition. This means that you are no longer defined by the pain and limitations of the past. You are no longer defined by your judgments, opinions or beliefs nor are you defined by the judgment, opinions or beliefs of others.
Leonard Jacobson
#14. There is nothing more likely to drive a man mad, than the being unable to get rid of the idea of the distinction between right and wrong, and an obstinate, constitutional preference of the true to the agreeable.
William Hazlitt
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