Famous Quotes & Sayings

1922 Liberty Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 10 famous quotes about 1922 Liberty with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top 1922 Liberty Quotes

Did you get hungry and eat my colleagues? — Sherrilyn Kenyon

There was no mistaking; he was a King on his throne... and I crowned him. — Jessica M. Collette

What is freedom?
Is it moving through a room unhindered, in any direction you want, fast or slow? Or is it being able to think any thought whatsoever, high or low, without shame or fear? Is freedom being able to openly express your convictions, and then trying to influence others to think the same thing? Or is freedom having the possibility to choose, being able to say no to what you don't want?
[...]
Freedom, thought Phillip Mouse, would be to outwit the limitations fate had once given him. To break out of the social, intellectual, and emotional framework that the factory [birthplace] and his youth had defined.
Freedom, thought Mouse, was to surprise life by placing yourself above your fate. — Tim Davys

Scorpius to Crichton "I know you're living on a stolen Leviathan with escaped prisoners, and I know that Leviathan is pregnant." "You know who the daddy is? — Paul Simpson

To have Zen is to be in a state of pure sensation. It is to be freed from the grip of concepts, to see through them. This is not the same as rejecting conceptual thinking. Thoughts and words are in the world and are as natural as flowers. It is a mistake therefore to think that Zen is anti-intellectual. — Alan Keightley

You can set a boundary with your words when you are honest and when you establish a consequence for another's hurtful actions. — Henry Cloud

I've been loved in life, but all that matters now is that I'm loved by you. -Eva — Abbi Glines

Before the words slide into their slots, they are just discrete items, pointing everywhere and nowhere. — Stanley Fish

You must respect people, and you must respect money. My father said to me: 'When you respect money, money will respect you.' — Yaya Toure

Katy was neither a Methodist nor a Masochist. She was a goddess and the silence of goddesses is genuinely golden. None of your superficial plating. A solid, twenty-two-carat silence all the way through. The Olympian's trap is kept shut, not by an act of willed discretion, but because there's really nothing to say. Goddesses are all of one piece. There's no internal conflict in them. Whereas the lives of people like you and me are one long argument. Desires on one side, woodpeckers on the other. Never a moment of real silence. — Aldous Huxley