Cotidianas In English Quotes & Sayings
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Top Cotidianas In English Quotes

He smiled, wondering if the owner would miss her handbag. What did she expect, leaving it in full view on the kitchen table last night? — Caroline Mitchell

The nature of happiness is such that happiness retreats the more intensely you pursue it. — Robertson Davies

The pessimist can be enraged at wrong; but only the optimist can be surprised at it. — G.K. Chesterton

The end point of leadership is not just the position of power we reach, but the continual change and deepening we experience that makes a difference in our lives, our work, our world. Our leadership journeys are only at midpoint when we have achieved a position of power. — Janet Hagberg

They say you can take someone who was born in Africa out of the bush but you can't take the bush out of someone born there ... — Lindsay Armstrong

I've come to learn that the determined and gifted and genuine sociopath has far more power to deceive than we realize. — Walter Kirn

I feel so strongly that deep and simple is far more essential than shallow and complex. — Fred Rogers

You must look beyond the past. It has already come and gone, and with it laid the pivotal foundations to your destiny in its wake. — Rhys Ella

I'm the unknown everyone's already sick of. — Jessica Chastain

I know how easy it is to put your foot in your mouth. — Kevin Hart

Sometime in the near future, I pray that my faith can surpass the physical reality that appears in front of me and beyond me. — Patricia Graham

Inside the terminal at Keahole, they sat waiting to board, watching husky Hawaiians load luggage onto baggage ramps. Arriving tourists smiled at their dark, muscled bodies, handsome full-featured faces, the ease with which they lifted things of bulk and weight. Departing tourists took snapshots of them.
'That's how they see us', Pono whispered. 'Porters, servants. Hula Dancers, clowns. They never see us as we are, complex, ambiguous, inspired humans.'
'Not all haole see us that way ... 'Jess argued.
Vanya stared at her. 'Yes, all Haole and every foreigner who comes here puts us in one of two categories: The malignant stereotype of vicious, drunken, do-nothing kanaka and their loose-hipped, whoring wahine. Or, the benign stereotype of the childlike, tourist-loving, bare-foot, aloha-spirit natives. — Kiana Davenport

The point,' Ms. Conyers continued, is that no word had one specific definition. Maybe in the dictionary, but not in real life. — Sarah Dessen