Top 15 The Road Cannibalism Quotes
#1. The brave men and women, who serve their country and as a result, live constantly with the war inside them, exist in a world of chaos. But the turmoil they experience isn't who they are; the PTSD invades their minds and bodies.
Robert Koger
#2. I'm trying to make the case that the church can indeed, from within its own resources, move out of a false, and often a hateful, characterization of and set of attitudes toward gay and lesbian people.
James Alison
#3. Your fears are not you. Do you hear me? They don't define who you are.
S.L. Jennings
#4. Open duh computer." Germans ought to farm out all positions of petty authority. The accent remained too full of implication.
Jonathan Lethem
#5. I don't watch TV. When people at my house try to talk about TV, I'm like, 'Ah, I have no idea what I'm talking about.'
Evangeline Lilly
#6. Liken had discovered that she was scared of heights, secretly read erotic stories, and had incredibly ticklish feet.
Marly Chance
#7. If you're not getting work, make your own work. I think that's a good mentality. I suppose I take my drive from my mother and my practicality from my father.
Sophie Kennedy Clark
#8. The trouble is you can't play many matches when you lose them.
Jelena Dokic
#9. Placid, adj.
Sometimes I love it when we just lie on our backs, gaze off, stay still.
David Levithan
#10. I think it's very important for people to not judge the people you're playing. You have to find a way to love them because their story is theirs. I just don't think there would be any use in that.
Sarah Paulson
#11. I go to church every Sunday, which is like going to the gas station once a week and really, really filling up.
Anne Lamott
#12. Hey, Haymitch, if you're not too drunk, we could use a little something for our skin. It's
Suzanne Collins
#13. When the word of God says one thing and scholarship says another, scholarship can go to hell.
Billy Sunday
#14. Custom is often only the antiquity of error.
Cyprian
#15. CHAPTER XXXIX INTRODUCES SOME RESPECTABLE CHARACTERS WITH WHOM THE READER IS ALREADY ACQUAINTED, AND SHEWS HOW MONKS AND THE JEW LAID THEIR WORTHY HEADS TOGETHER
Charles Dickens
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