Famous Quotes & Sayings

1966 Coleman Quotes & Sayings

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Top 1966 Coleman Quotes

1966 Coleman Quotes By Virginia Woolf

She had a right to his arm, though it was without feeling. He would give her, who was so simple, so impulsive, only twenty-four, without friends in England, who had left Italy for his sake, a piece of bone. — Virginia Woolf

1966 Coleman Quotes By Rajasaraswathii

We have to become vast, only then we can succeed;but we confine our thinking ability most of the times — Rajasaraswathii

1966 Coleman Quotes By Diane Von Furstenberg

What is style? It is an effortless confidence in being yourself, it is a way of putting yourself together according to your mood and what you want to project. Personal style appears to come naturally for some, but for others it can take a while to find it! — Diane Von Furstenberg

1966 Coleman Quotes By Louis P Kicha

The oceans are full of surprises! — Louis P Kicha

1966 Coleman Quotes By Jerry Reinsdorf

Basketball is a game. Baseball is a religion. Baseball is American. — Jerry Reinsdorf

1966 Coleman Quotes By Jenna Morasca

As human beings we value the experience that comes with age. We are reminded over and over again with statements like 'older and wiser' and 'respect your elders,' promoting age as something to be cherished and respected. — Jenna Morasca

1966 Coleman Quotes By William Makepeace Thackeray

No particular motive for living, except the custom and habit of it. — William Makepeace Thackeray

1966 Coleman Quotes By Brian Friel

The Troubles are a pigmentation in our lives here, a constant irritation that detracts from real life. But life has to do with something else as well, and it's the other things which are the more permanent and real. — Brian Friel

1966 Coleman Quotes By Ernst F. Schumacher

All philosophers - and others - have always paid a great deal of attention to ideas seen as the result of thought and observation; but in modern times all too little attention has been paid to the study of the ideas which form the very instruments by which thought and observation proceed. On the basis of experience and conscious thought small ideas may easily be dislodged, but when it comes to bigger. more universal, or more subtle ideas it may not be so easy to change them. Indeed, it is often difficult to become aware of them, as they are the instruments and not the results of our thinking - just as you can see what is outside you, but cannot easily see that with which you see, the eye itself. — Ernst F. Schumacher