Famous Quotes & Sayings

Creditworthiness Assumption Quotes & Sayings

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Top Creditworthiness Assumption Quotes

Creditworthiness Assumption Quotes By Francis Bacon

Do not wonder if the common people speak more truly than those above them: they speak more safely. — Francis Bacon

Creditworthiness Assumption Quotes By Toni Sorenson

Christmas is a blanket that warms our cold hearts. — Toni Sorenson

Creditworthiness Assumption Quotes By Jonathon Porritt

If something is sustainable, it means we can go on doing it indefinitely. If it isn't, we can't — Jonathon Porritt

Creditworthiness Assumption Quotes By Pearl White

All the home I know is a hotel. Why, I don't even have a dog ... I don't know the first thing about cooking or taking care of a house. — Pearl White

Creditworthiness Assumption Quotes By Rainer Maria Rilke

Depict your sorrows and desires, your passing thoughts and beliefs in some kind of beauty- depict all that with heartfelt, quiet, humble sincerity and use to express yourself the things that surround you,the images of your dreams and the objects of your memory. If your everyday life seems poor to you, do not accuse it; accuse yourself, tell yourself you are not poet enough to summon up its riches; since for the creator there is no poverty and no poor or unimportant place. — Rainer Maria Rilke

Creditworthiness Assumption Quotes By Russell Brand

This is why people get obsessed with festivals, or clubs, or drugs, or football, or other temporal approximations of togetherness; these distilled vials of the elixir are craved by our starved souls. — Russell Brand

Creditworthiness Assumption Quotes By James Franco

I've been acting for many years now, and I find there's nothing I enjoy more than making films with my friends and people I like, who also are the funniest people around. — James Franco

Creditworthiness Assumption Quotes By Arthur L. Stinchcombe

[F]or a social theorist ignorance is more excusable than vagueness. Other investigators can easily show I am wrong if I am sufficiently precise. They will have much more difficulty showing by investigation what, precisely, I mean if I am vague. I hope not to be forced to weasel out with 'But I didn't really mean that.' Social theorists should prefer to be wrong rather than misunderstood. Being misunderstood shows sloppy theoretical work. — Arthur L. Stinchcombe