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Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes & Sayings

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Top Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By M. F. Husain

All this talk about inspiration and moment is nonsense. — M. F. Husain

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Aminatta Forna

The artist Paul Klee described drawing a picture as taking a line for a walk. I have borrowed his words to explain my approach to writing; when I write a novel it is like I am taking a thought for a walk. — Aminatta Forna

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Charles Beaumont

Came Honker's trip to Slice City along about then: our sax-man got a neck all full of the sharpest kind of steel. So we were out one horn. And you could tell: we played a little bit too rough, and the head-arrangements Collins and His Crew grew up to, they needed Honker's grease in the worst way. But we'd been together for five years or more, and a new man just didn't play somehow. We were this one solid thing, like a unit, and somebody had cut off a piece of us and we couldn't grow the piece back so we just tried to get along anyway, bleeding every night, bleeding from that wound. ("Black Country") — Charles Beaumont

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Mitch Hedberg

Well, that's a 'fresher'. I'm going on break. — Mitch Hedberg

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Marie Calloway

I seem to have made my friends proud of me/proud to know me. I also feel I've learned and grown a lot even in this short time, and this event has given me a lot of opportunity to continue doing so. Obviously there were a lot of negative reactions, but they seem to have overall little relevance to my life. — Marie Calloway

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By J.K. Rowling

Much as he detested Filch, Harry couldn't help feeling a bit sorry for him, though not nearly as sorry as he felt for himself. — J.K. Rowling

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Gabrielle Zevin

When dad says he's going to church, he actually means he's going to a library or a bookstore. - Gabrielle Zevin, Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac. — Gabrielle Zevin

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Peter Schuyler

To be fair, lying is part and parcel of public life. Every politician has lied about something because they are owned by the special interest groups that finance their elections. — Peter Schuyler

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Jeff Olson

You can gauge the limitations of a person's life by the size of the problems that get him or her down. You can measure the impact a person's life has by the size of the problems he or she solves. — Jeff Olson

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By J.D. Stockholm

He said the only reason I got to have nice things was because I got to be such a nice looking boy. He said when people looked like me. I didn't need the brains. I just tricked it from people. I didn't know what kind of boy my dad meant. My dad said I was that kind of boy. He said it one day I was in the bath and he got his hand on my thing. I didn't want to be that kind of boy. I didn't want people to touch me like that. It hurt. But my dad said it's how to get nice things. If I got to be nice back. — J.D. Stockholm

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Mary Gordon

We all of us deserve happiness or none of us does. — Mary Gordon

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Moonshine Noire

(...) pick up your axe, start at the roots

don't miss the trunk, never forget:

to end life truly and finally

start at the roots or end there. — Moonshine Noire

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Project Itoh

Heidrich and Himmler tried to eliminate obesity among the SS, Professor Saeki said. Himmler's dream was that one day, all Germans would be vegetarians — Project Itoh

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Roseanne Barr

As a housewife, I feel that if the kids are alive when my husband gets home from work, then hey, I've done my job — Roseanne Barr

Disgorged In A Sentence Quotes By Henry Sidgwick

Truthspeaking is only valuable as a means to the preservation of society: only if it be admitted that it is valuable on this ground I should say that it is implied that the preservation of society---or some further end to which this preservation, again, is a means---must be valuable per se, and therefore something at which a rational being, as such, ought to aim. If it be granted that we need not look beyond the preservation of society, the primary 'dictate of reason' in this case would be 'that society ought to be preserved': but reason would also dictate that truth ought to be spoken, so far as truthspeaking is recognised as the indispensable or fittest means to this end: and the notion "ought' as used in either dictate is that which I have been trying to make clear. — Henry Sidgwick