Hatake Kakashi Quotes & Sayings
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Top Hatake Kakashi Quotes

Clergymen who publish pious frauds in the interest of the church are the orthodox liars of God. — Samuel Taylor Coleridge

It is very important not to mistake hemlock for parsley; but not at all so to believe or not in God. — Denis Diderot

In Burgundy and in the cities of the South the tree of Liberty was planted. That is to say, a pole topped by the revolutionary red bonnet. — Victor Hugo

The end is here, and you don't want be here. You are the best in the world at something, and you know you are not going to be that great at anything else. — Steve Young

I'm Kakashi Hatake. Things I like and things I hate ... I don't feel like telling you that. My dreams for the future ... never really thought about it. As for my hobbies ... I have lots of hobbies. — Masashi Kishimoto

Life is a big ol' canvas. And you have every combination of colors to paint with. — Oprah Winfrey

It is certain that every class is interested in [educational] establishments which give to the human mind its highest improvements, and to every Country its truest and most durable celebrity. — James Madison

Marriage equality - I think that it's a constitutionally guaranteed right. Let's end the drug wars. Let's balance the federal budget, and that means reforming the entitlements - Medicaid, Medicare. — Gary Johnson

The two don't necessarily translate, especially if you're a prize fighter: you've fought all your life, you've fought all these fights, and now you're trying to do a movie. You see that happen a lot - a lot of professional fighters don't necessarily make it so well into the movie world. — Daniel Wu

I just love scary movies. I love the thrill. — Odette Annable

I remember someone saying to my mom that it must be so glamorous to have a child acting in movies. They had no idea how hard it was for her. — Douglas Booth

Cornwallis was a man who could have thrust his hand in a flame if necessary, but not a man to organize the logistics and arrangements of a large campaign with a likely risk of failure. The smooth face in the Gainsborough portrait with no lines of thought or of frowns or of laughter - with no lines at all - tells as much. It is a face composed by a life of comfort and satisfaction without any need of desperate attempts. As — Barbara W. Tuchman