Chiding Syllable Quotes & Sayings
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Top Chiding Syllable Quotes

Envying another man's happiness is madness; you wouldn't know what to do with it if you had it. — Andre Gide

If we could be pure dancers in spirit we would never be afraid to love, and we would love with strength and wisdom. — Ben Okri

Flirt with the old ladies and you'll be fine," I muttered, shoving my stuff into the cubby.
He hung his green hoodie on the hooks right beside me. "Is that how you get by?"
"Doesn't work on the old ladies for me, but the old men on the other hand?" I paused and glanced at my nails. "Yeah, doesn't work on them either. — Katherine McIntyre

Have I ever written anything that has really changed something? What I believe is that you can't change anything without using art. I believe that the drops wear away the stone. I try to be part of that army. — Henning Mankell

A man's whole life / may be a metaphor - but a woman's lot / is symbol. — Lorna Dee Cervantes

You just have to forget whatever you were taught about "meaningful work" and start noticing whatever has meaning to you. — Barbara Sher

When you're on stage, you gotta do it. People pay to see you, and they deserve to be entertained, and you should go out there and really give it your best shot. And that's quite a challenge. — Cass Elliot

It took teams of LEP warlocks to slow down time for a few hours; the magic required to open a door to the tunnel was stupendous. It would be easier to shoot down the moon.
Opal tapped this into her notepad.
Reminder. Shoot down the moon? Viable? — Eoin Colfer

I love to read about anger. A "feel bad" book always makes me feel good. And no other novel in the history of literature is more depressing than Christina Stead's The Man Who Loved Children. — John Waters

Knowledge in any society should be the power of transformation. — Henry Johnson Jr

And now it appears to me that the tale I have to tell, spanning a million years, doesn't change all that much from beginning to end. In the beginning, as in the end, I find myself speaking of human beings, regardless of their brain size, as fisherfolk. — Kurt Vonnegut Jr.