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Annoncer Translation Quotes & Sayings

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Top Annoncer Translation Quotes

It doesn't matter how smart you are unless you stop and think. — Thomas Sowell

Mainstream feminism might remember that the war on women always starts with the war on whores. — Molly Crabapple

I prefer the old theaters because the audience is ... trapped. — Jerry Seinfeld

Okay, that really shouldn't have happened. And we're not going to talk about that, right? Ever?"
"Right," she said. She felt like there was light dripping from her fingertips. Spilling out of her toes. She felt full of light, in fact, warm buttery sunlight. "Never happened."
He opened his mouth, then closed it, and closed his eyes. "Claire - "
"I know."
"Lock the door," he said. — Rachel Caine

The human voice is the organ of the soul. — Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

It is only by this moderation that there is effected an early return (to man's normal state). — Lao-Tzu

Its purpose is self-renewal, and this is accomplished by spending time alone, immersed in the beautiful blanket of silence. — Robin S. Sharma

Christians think a long record of church attendence and Bible reading is equivalent to an advanced degree in science. — Graham Kendall

Nothing that comes and goes is you.
'I am bored.' Who knows this?
'I am angry, sad, afraid.' Who knows this?
You are the knowing, not the condition that is known. — Eckhart Tolle

Everything on earth has happened before,
nothing is new,
but woe to the lovers
who fail to discover a fresh blossom
in every future kiss. — Jaroslav Seifert

In March 1950, in New York City, I was married to Marietta Soffer. We have three children: Vilhelm, Tomas, and Margrethe. — Aage Bohr

In our dreams we are able to fly ... and that is a remembering of how we were meant to be. — Madeleine L'Engle

I was walking down Granville Street, Vancouver's version of "The Strip," and I was looking into one of the video arcades. I could see in the physical intensity of their postures how rapt the kids inside were. It was like one of those closed systems out of a Pynchon novel: a feedback loop with photons coming off the screens into the kids' eyes, neurons moving through their bodies, and electrons moving through the video game. These kids clearly believed in the space games projected. Everyone I know who works with computers seems to develop a belief that there's some kind of actual space behind the screen, someplace you can't see but you know is there. — William Gibson