Top 24 Sayings About Self Tagalog
#1. I speak Cantonese, and I speak Tagalog.
Reggie Lee
#2. I won't be affected by your charm nor I will trap you into marriage. I've been there once, never again.
- Kristine
Martha Cecilia
#3. There are no reasons. She is obliged to be as she is. We all are. Reasons are in books.
Philip Roth
#5. Public scandals are America's favorite parlor sport. Learning about the flaws and misdeeds of the rich and famous seems to satisfy our egalitarian yearnings.
Robert Dallek
#6. The reasons for which 'this' world has been characterized as 'apparent' are the very reasons which indicate its reality; any other kind of reality is absolutely indemonstrable.
Friedrich Nietzsche
#7. For her, this was one of the happiest things on earth--to be in love with someone who is more in love with you.
Marione Ashley
#8. Win?" Call said, startled. It hadn't occurred to him that Master Rufus was expecting them to win the test. Not after a whole onth of sand. "We're not going to win." He was mostly concerned with whether they would survive.
"That's the spirit." Aaron hid a grin.
Cassandra Clare
#11. Boondocks' is simply the Tagalog word for mountains.
Sharyn McCrumb
#12. Those from whose pocket the salary is drawn, and by whose appointment the officer was made, have always a right to discuss the merits of their officers, and their modes of exercising the duties they are paid to perform.
Charles Babbage
#13. I'm going to do whatever the world tells me to. I'm going to act like I'm in a goddamn Bob Dylan song and blow in the direction of the wind. I'm going to pretend my future's wide open, and that anything can happen.
Nicola Yoon
#14. Faith to me is a form of self-expression, like a work of art, a manifestation of freedom, not a tool for mindless conformity.
Sahar El-Nadi
#15. Indeed, education is one of the institutions most deserving of disruption
and with the greatest opportunities to come of it.
Jeff Jarvis
#16. What do you want, Alvaro?
- Kristine
Ikaw. Marry me.
- Alvaro
Martha Cecilia
#17. In Tagalog, we call undocumented people 'TNT,' which means tago ng tago, which means 'hiding and hiding.' So that's literally what undocumented means in Tagalog. And that kind of tells you how Filipinos think of this issue, and really any culture, right?
Jose Antonio Vargas
#18. Sobbing, Sam took another step. This is the last one, the very last, I can't go on, I can't. But his feet moved again. One and then the other. They took a step, and then another, and he thought, They're not my feet, they're someone else's, someone else is walking, it can't be me.
George R R Martin
#20. No one on this earth can define 'MY' potential, I
believe it is LIMITLESS...Now my endeavor is to continually UNLIMIT
myself !!!!
Abha Maryada Banerjee
#22. I loved, but Esau I hated. 14What shall we say then? w Is there injustice on God's part? By no means!
Anonymous
#23. My tongue was handed down to me
by datus and katipuneros. The truth is
my mouth is a battlefield that
you wouldn't know how to fight in.
Danabelle Gutierrez
#24. I write entirely in English; Tagalog chauvinists chide me for this. I feel no guilt in doing so. But I am sad that I cannot write in my native Ilokano. History demanded this; if it isn't English I am using now, I would most probably be writing in Spanish like Rizal, or even German or Japanese.
F. Sionil Jose