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Fahrenheit 451 Meaningful Quotes & Sayings

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Top Fahrenheit 451 Meaningful Quotes

Fahrenheit 451 Meaningful Quotes By Nicola Peltz

I'll always be the baby in the family. I'm the youngest sister, but growing up with so many boys, it makes you tough. You get teased. There's no tiptoeing around each other. You say it the way it is; you're honest. — Nicola Peltz

Fahrenheit 451 Meaningful Quotes By Nicole Holofcener

If anything, I learned most from being a huge fan of his and watching movies like Annie Hall and Manhattan over and over again - that influenced the kind of movies that I wanted to make more than anything else. — Nicole Holofcener

Fahrenheit 451 Meaningful Quotes By Reggie Joiner

Never embrace a version of the gospel that doesn't require you to do life with someone who isn't like you. — Reggie Joiner

Fahrenheit 451 Meaningful Quotes By Colleen Hoover

Me: Why don't you ever practice on your balcony like you used to? This question gets me immediate eye contact from him, but it doesn't last. His eyes flicker across my face, down my body, and finally back to his phone.
Ridge: Why would I? You're not out there anymore. — Colleen Hoover

Fahrenheit 451 Meaningful Quotes By Moira Kelly

We're not all called to be Dorothy Day. — Moira Kelly

Fahrenheit 451 Meaningful Quotes By Abhijit Naskar

Quite like religious fundamentalism, educational fundamentalism is based upon bookish creeds created by the self-proclaimed authority figures of the system. And this very fundamentalism is the cause of all the growing conflicts between the student-body of the education society and the teachers running that society. These conflicts further become tools of exploitation in the hands of a handful of war-mongering, authoritarian, blood-sucking politicians. — Abhijit Naskar

Fahrenheit 451 Meaningful Quotes By Gilles Quispel

During the persecutions under the Emperor Domitian, John was summoned to Rome, where he was tortured by immersion in a pot of boiling oil and subsequently banished to the island of Patmos in the Aegean sea. It was there he wrote his Apocalypse. It was only after the death of Domitian, in A.D. 96, that he returned to Ephesus, where he was still living during the reign of the Emperor Trajan (A.D. 98-117). He became so old and frail that he could no longer walk and had to be carried to meetings and services. All he could manage to say was, "My little children, love one another." He repeated this over and over. — Gilles Quispel