Famous Emma Frost Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 10 famous quotes about Famous Emma Frost with everyone.
Top Famous Emma Frost Quotes

They say sleep is the cousin of death, guess we related ...
Cause I'm the most slept on, and the most hated. — Jayceon Terrell Taylor

I was not insecure. I was a perfectly normal combination of arrogant and narcissistic. — Dani Alexander

"His words moved people closer to God." I'd be happy if that's what people said about me at the end of the day. It's always been my calling. — Brian Bird

The night was nippy and a few stars were out, dimmed by the grin of a crescent moon. — E.E. Giorgi

Our audience, it has been a more difficult process for classical music audiences around the world, and I'm not completely certain why. — Esa-Pekka Salonen

I do use an electric violin. Actually, my regular electric violin, which I sometimes use, is by Ned Steinburger. — Aleksey Igudesman

Thinking too much has been my problem for a very long time. — Rick Yancey

I think my role is as a writer, especially, and then also as a speaker, an organizer, and an entre- preneur of social change. My role isn't to make choices for people-each individual or group needs to do that on their own. But as a writer and a speaker, you can describe possibilities that perhaps haven't been visible before, and aren't in other public dialogues or in the rest of the media. So I suppose I think of myself mainly as an organizer and as someone who describes possibilities. — Gloria Steinem

The cars rushing below knew nothing. People in cars weren't New Yorkers anyway, they'd suffered some basic misunderstanding. The two boys on the walkway, apparently standing still they were moving faster than the cars.
Nineteen seventy-five. — Jonathan Lethem

For the longest time the romantic explanation for low rates of female infection endured: Possession of a womb, it was supposed, conferred a gentleness which simply could not bear the viciousness of a lycanthropic heart. Female werewolves, masculine idiocy maintained, must be killing themselves in crazy numbers ... It's quite extraordinary, given the wealth of historical evidence to the contrary, how long this fallacy of the gentler sex lasted, but the twentieth century (years before Myra and the girls of Abu Ghraib put their two penn'orth in) pretty much did away with it. Now we know: If women don't catch the werewolf bug, it's certainly not because they're sugar and spice and all things nice. — Glen Duncan