Conye Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 15 famous quotes about Conye with everyone.
Top Conye Quotes

The Eucharist, behold the Christian's treasure, his delight on earth. Since Jesus is in the Eucharist for him personally, his whole life ought to be drawn to it like a magnet to its center. — Peter Julian Eymard

You've got to be happy, you have to do this thing [music] for the love. It's not like you go into music because it's going to make a lot of money. It's something you do ... that's the thing. You got to accept all that hard work with it, too. And enjoy it, and love it. — Creed Bratton

You can even tell where a person's family came from by looking at the type of bacterium he or she carries! — Jennifer Gardy

Textbook science is beautiful! Textbook science is comprehensible, unlike mere fascinating words that can never be truly beautiful. Elementary science textbooks describe simple theories, and simplicity is the core of scientific beauty. Fascinating words have no power, nor yet any meaning, without the math. — Eliezer Yudkowsky

And that's all right with me. — Sammy Johns

Share your stories of your worst moments as well as your best. Let your sisters know their problems are not unique and they are not alone. — Gloria Feldt

We must not only read the Scriptures, but we must make their rules of life our own. — Hosea Ballou

Inter species couplings? Why didn't you just come out and ask if he was banging a nymph and get it over with? — Amanda Carlson

There would be no Christmas if there was no Easter. — Gordon B. Hinckley

She would not have cared to confess how infinitely she preferred the exactitude, the star-like impersonality, of figures to the confusion, agitation, and vagueness of the finest prose. — Virginia Woolf

Adventures are not all pony-rides in May-sunshine. — J.R.R. Tolkien

To understand someone, find out how he spends his money. — Mason Cooley

No one has even a definitive spelling for Cawdrey's name (Cowdrey, Cawdry). But then, no one agreed on the spelling of most names: they were spoken, seldom written. In fact, few had any concept of "spelling" - the idea that each word, when written, should take a particular predetermined form of letters. The word cony (rabbit) appeared variously as conny, conye, conie, connie, coni, cuny, cunny, and cunnie in a single 1591 pamphlet. — James Gleick