Famous Quotes & Sayings

Emil Mannerheim Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 11 famous quotes about Emil Mannerheim with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Emil Mannerheim Quotes

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Pepper Winters

Write what you're thinking. Write one fucking word, and that will be good enough for now. — Pepper Winters

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Wally Lamb

Sarcasm is a suit of armor. — Wally Lamb

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Matt Chandler

When the people in a church dwell together in the unity of the gospel and together pursue the building up of one another in love, they are providing fertile soil for the roots of deep joy. But — Matt Chandler

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim

Fortifications, artillery, foreign aid - will be of no value, unless the ordinary soldier knows that it is HE guarding his country — Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim

For a strong adversary (corps) the opposition of twenty-four squadrons and twelve guns ought not to have appeared very serious, but in war the psychological factors are often decisive. An adversary who feels inferior is in reality so. — Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Doris Roberts

Don't let a suitcase filled with cheese be your big fork and spoon. — Doris Roberts

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Enrique Pena Nieto

Mexico cannot put up with this scenario of death and kidnapping. — Enrique Pena Nieto

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Tom Brokaw

John F. Kennedy, the man I had thought would define the political ideal for the rest of my days, was suddenly gone in the senseless violence of a single moment. — Tom Brokaw

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Todd Stocker

Fear takes root in the soil of insecurity. — Todd Stocker

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim

Officers don't run, only corporals do that — Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim

Emil Mannerheim Quotes By Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim

The French are completely without scruples, energy or valor - the Great War castrated them and left them diminished, whiney, mistaking bickering for debate and shrillness for eloquence, they are a nation in such effete decline that Shickelgrubber, when he finally attacks them, might be dancing with the keys to Paris in his hand after a week or two of puny skirmishing. — Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim