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Do You Capitalise Quotes & Sayings

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Top Do You Capitalise Quotes

Do You Capitalise Quotes By Honeysuckle Weeks

I'm looking forward to sproglets but, as I'm the main breadwinner, I feel I ought to capitalise on my career for a bit longer. Mother keeps telling me I should go and freeze some eggs. Not terribly romantic, is it? — Honeysuckle Weeks

Do You Capitalise Quotes By Randeep Hooda

For very long, I wasn't able to find a place for myself in movies. After my initial success, I didn't know how to capitalise on it. — Randeep Hooda

Do You Capitalise Quotes By Eddie Cibrian

I think there are some people who are just kind of born to create drama and then capitalise on it. — Eddie Cibrian

Do You Capitalise Quotes By Gordon Taylor

The whole object of the players' association is to try and make sure that any individual is able to capitalise on his ability, particularly in football, which is a very short career. — Gordon Taylor

Do You Capitalise Quotes By Theodor W. Adorno

Mahler was a poor yea-sayer. His voice cracks, like Nietzsche's, when he proclaims values, speaks from mere conviction, when he himself puts into practice the abhorrent notion of overcoming on which the thematic analyses capitalise, and makes music as if joy were already in the world. His vainly jubilant movements unmask jubilation; his subjective incapacity for the happy end denounces itself. — Theodor W. Adorno

Do You Capitalise Quotes By Anthony Anderson

Be ready for when your time comes, you will have that window of opportunity, so seize the moment and capitalise on it. — Anthony Anderson

Do You Capitalise Quotes By Efraim Karsh

This mixture of political and geographical considerations compounded Saddam's failure to grasp the operational requirements of such a campaign. Rather than allowing his forces to advance until their momentum was exhausted, he voluntarily halted their advance within a week of the onset of hostilities and then announced his willingness to negotiate a settlement. This decision not to capitalise on Iraq's early military successes by applying increased pressure had a number of dire consequences which, in turn, led to the reversal of the course of the war. It saved the Iranian army from a decisive defeat and gave Tehran precious time to re-organise and regroup; and it had a devastating impact on the morale of the Iraqi army and hence on its combat performance. Above all, the limited Iraqi invasion did nothing to endanger the revolutionary regime, nor to drive Ayatollah Khomeini towards moderation. — Efraim Karsh