Famous Quotes & Sayings

Georges Remi Quotes & Sayings

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Top Georges Remi Quotes

Georges Remi Quotes By Anonymous

CreativeMornings came out of a personal rule of mine that if I keep complaining about something, I need to change it or move on. — Anonymous

Georges Remi Quotes By Yiannis Ritsos

And look, my brother, we learned to talk
very quietly and simply.
We understand each other now - there is no need for anything more.
And I say tomorrow we will become still simpler;
we'll find those words that take on the same weight in all hearts, on all lips so that we can call figs figs, and a trough a trough, so that others will smile and say: 'We're making you a hundred poems an hour'. This is what we want too.
Because we do not sing to separate ourselves from people, my brother,
we sing to bring people together. — Yiannis Ritsos

Georges Remi Quotes By Chinua Achebe

The world is large," said Okonkwo. "I have even heard that in some tribes a man's children belong to his wife and her family."
"That cannot be," said Machi. "You might as well say that the woman lies on top of the man when they are making the babies. — Chinua Achebe

Georges Remi Quotes By Hilda Scott

The personal is not just political. It is also economic. — Hilda Scott

Georges Remi Quotes By Richard D. Ekstrom

About 35-40% of the time, a player wants to create a word ending in a specific letter. This, however, is not the way we traditionally think, and, not to mention, this is not the way dictionaries are sorted. In other words, in many situations, conventional dictionaries are not arranged in an easy to use manner. This dictionary solves that problem by sorting on the last letter of the word. — Richard D. Ekstrom

Georges Remi Quotes By Jennifer Crusie

You've lived in America for twenty years. Eat badly, damn it. — Jennifer Crusie

Georges Remi Quotes By Arthur Schopenhauer

In order to increase his pleasures, man has intentionally added to the number and pressure of his needs, which in their original state were not much more difficult to satisfy than those of the brute. Hence luxury in all its forms; delicate food, the use of tobacco and opium, spirituous liquors, fine clothes, and the thousand and one things that he considers necessary to his existence. — Arthur Schopenhauer