
Top 16 Teetotaler Quotes
#1. I was horribly bookish, to the point of coming right out and saying it, which I knew was not socially acceptable. I particularly loved the adjective bookish, which I found other people used about as often as ramrod or chum or teetotaler.
David Levithan
#3. A teetotaler would regard it as his duty to associate with his drunkard brother for the purpose of weaning him from the evil habit.
Mahatma Gandhi
#4. The typical socialist ... a prim little man with a white-collar job, usually a secret teetotaler and often with vegetarian leanings.
George Orwell
#5. TEETOTALER, n. One who abstains from strong drink, sometimes totally, sometimes tolerably totally.
Ambrose Bierce
#6. I worked nightclubs all through my 20s, and I was a teetotaler.
Dick Van Dyke
#7. I'm only a beer teetotaler, not a champagne teetotaler; I don't like beer.
George Bernard Shaw
#8. I'd hate to be a teetotaler. Imagine getting up in the morning and knowing that's as good as you're going to feel all day.
Dean Martin
#9. In a democracy only will the freeman of nature design to dwell.
Plato
#10. I turn to her and cut her off. I said this would be quick, darling. Trust me, if I were bringing you to my room to seduce you, it wouldn't be quick, I'd be exploring you all day and night.
Kristen Proby
#11. My home was in darkness and my companions were shadows beckoning to me from a glass
Anna Kavan
#12. The perfect detective story cannot be written. The type of mind which can evolve the perfect problem is not the type of mind that can produce the artistic job of writing.
Raymond Chandler
#14. The real fight is the fight of software developers, of the people who have been writing the software of the financial system. We call on them, in order for them to do what Wikileaks has done in the field of information. Decommission, rewrite, and change the course of the future.
Anonymous
#15. Love is the only thing that we can carry with us when we go, and it makes the end so easy.
Louisa May Alcott
#16. So soon as the possession of property becomes the basis of popular esteem, therefore, it becomes also a requisite to that complacency which we call self-respect.
Thorstein Veblen
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