
Top 25 Ukya Quotes
#1. But mum was tough. No matter how fancily she dressed, she couldn't hide her true nature. Everyone at school was scared of her. Especially the other mums. She once knocked out a man with a single punch when he barged her trolley in Sainsbury's.
Matthew Crow
#2. We're out in the open. Dave is at the top of the track, playing guard. I'm blindfolded by my own top, and Jake is about to make love to me on his sexy Aston Martin with "Pour Some Sugar on Me" playing in the background.
Could he be any fucking hotter?
Samantha Towle
#3. Grandma's house had the atmosphere of a Tupperware box left out in the sun. Like a tropical flower, she had to be kept warm and moist at all times, or she would wilt and die.
Matthew Crow
#4. I was practically The Boy in the Bubble; all my autoimmune responses stripped bare by chemical representations of pine forests and summer meadows.
Matthew Crow
#5. I hate to see it go, I'll tell you that. I played here all my life. Eighteen years I played here and I'm sorry to see it go.
Yogi Berra
#6. The last rule was to make enumerations so complete, and reviews so comprehensive, that I should be certain of omitting nothing.
Rene Descartes
#7. I love you. You're mine. I'll kill any bastard who tries to take you from me.
Samantha Young
#8. Like, like, like. My confidence grew with each click.
Keren David
#10. I don't expect you'll hear me writing any poems to the greater glory of Ronald and Nancy Reagan.
Robert Penn Warren
#11. I think "honest" sometimes gets used to describe a real depiction of real life. I don't think that's necessarily what we're doing. We created these fake characters and we're just trying to figure out what they would do in situations they enter into.
Paul Rust
#12. At their time of life they should be wearing trouser suits and baking cakes, maybe spending their days penning hand-written letters of complaint to newspapers. Not drinking alcopops with crude straws in them.
Matthew Crow
#13. By never marrying, I ended up never divorcing, but I also failed to accumulate that brocade of civility and padlock of security - kids you do or don't want, Tiffany silver you never use - that makes life complete.
Elizabeth Wurtzel
#14. But just as nature abhors a vacuum
so does the human heart.
Jojo Moyes
#15. He had to be nice to me at the moment because he had to be surrounded by people. This was because boys like him were, essentially, pasta. Everyone thought they loved him because they had never been forced to experience the true blandness of him on his own.
Matthew Crow
#16. Sadie was full of crap at the best of times, and in an institution where laxatives were traded like cigarettes in jail, that was really saying something.
James Dawson
#17. Nothing's ever all bad if you think hard enough about it.
Matthew Crow
#18. Again and again his tongue returns to that space between his front teeth. I'll look at this tree instead.
Jandy Nelson
#19. This is what they mean by epiphanies. I am almost thinking in exclamation points.
Claire Hennessy
#20. Woe to the man who tries to remain objective and to maintain a wide perspective: every one will label him as an enemy.
Paul Tournier
#21. They crave attention though, they always saying show me som
but girl you aint the only one that's tryna be the only one
Drake
#22. Rich people acquire assets. The poor and middle class acquire liabilities that they think are assets,
Robert Kiyosaki
#23. If it's lawful to have a rifle club to kill pheasants, it should be just as lawful to have one to kill wolves or dogs that are being sicked on little black babies. In fact, it's constitutional. Article Number Two of the constitution guarantees the right of every citizen to own a rifle or a shot gun.
Malcolm X
#24. He realized that he was manacled hand and foot with fetters that were only more intolerable because they consisted of nothing more substantial than the dread of causing pain.
W. Somerset Maugham
#25. Mum just laughed gleefully at his mounting frustration, like the villainous matriarch in a Roald Dahl story. I suspect a TV guide would describe her idea of comedy as 'dark', or, at very best, 'alternative'.
Matthew Crow
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