Famous Quotes & Sayings

Betrayals Philippine Quotes & Sayings

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Top Betrayals Philippine Quotes

Princeton isn't actually part of New Jersey. It's a small island of wealth and intellectual eccentricity floating in the Sea of Central Megalopolis. It's an honest-to-god town awash in the land of the strip mall. Hair is smaller, heels are shorter, asses are tighter in Princeton. — Janet Evanovich

I don't eat anything on an airplane. — Masaharu Morimoto

And wasn't that the inexhaustible struggle for Greta? Her perpetual need to be alone but always loved, and in love. — David Ebershoff

Maybe what a gay icon is, is a person who is rooted for - in other words, cheered on - by people who feel different. — Liza Minnelli

I was happy there. Which is to say I was not unhappy there. Unhappiness and happiness I have always been able to carry about with me, irrespective of place and people, because I have never joined in. — Stephen Fry

When you die you pass into inner worlds and continue to perceive. Death is not the dissolution of the self. Death is rather just a change in perception. — Frederick Lenz

Of all mankind the great poet is the equable man. Not in him but off from him things are grotesque or eccentric or fail of their sanity. — Walt Whitman

We are always open to instruction, willing to be wiser every day than we were before, and to change whatever we can change for the better. — John Wesley

They say a reformed roue makes the best husband, but, Oh! Didn't they tell you? Monsters can't be reformed ... — John Geddes

I've dreamed of having my French bulldog become a bestselling children's heroine. — Andrea Seigel

And that's the last oath I shall ever be able to swear," she thought; "once I set foot on English soil. And I shall never be able to crack a man over the head, or tell him he lies in his teeth, or draw my sword and run him through the body, or sit among my peers, or wear a coronet, or walk in procession, or sentence a man to death, or lead an army, or prance down Whitehall on a charger, or wear seventy-two different medals on my breast. All I can do, once I set foot on English soil, is to pour out tea and ask my lords how they like it. D'you take sugar? D'you take cream?" And mincing out the words, she was horrified to perceive how low an opinion she was forming of the other sex, the manly, to which it had once been her pride to belong. — Virginia Woolf

Could it be that sexual perversion and romanticism sprang from the same longing for distant horizons? — Colin Wilson

I owe all my success to stupidity. — Tom Monaghan