Heterophobia Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 14 famous quotes about Heterophobia with everyone.
Top Heterophobia Quotes

You can never, ever worry about making mistakes or things like that. I'm going to go out and play ball, and that's what I do. — Mario Williams

She learned to catch a moment in her hand before it flew away and hold it tightly while she had the chance. — Beth Moore

For centuries, the question of men needing to comprehend women simply didn't arise. Men were valued according to how they measured up to the manly virtues. — Allison Pearson

(...) but, oh! the weight of never-ending time - the tedious passage of the still-succeeding hours! — Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

When fans of mine meet me, I can see the disappointment in their eyes. Every artist knows of this phenomenon. — John Banville

I heard where it's a misery wrapped in an enema. — Terry Pratchett

Quite often somebody will say, 'What year do your books take place?' and the only answer I can give is, in childhood. — Beverly Cleary

When I was little I went to a Baptist Church with my grandmother. My earliest memories were of her falling out in the middle of the floor and they had to cover her with a white sheet. Every time we went to church it was scary. The music would start playing, and then everybody would start running and shouting and hollering and screaming. — Sherri Shepherd

You know, people do call it homophobia, and even that term alone is interesting to me. Because I don't even know how they call it homophobia, because that's a fear of the same. It's more heterophobia. It's a fear of something different from yourself. — Scott Fujita

The lack of a delete button on the internet is a significant issue, — Eric Schmidt

If the twenty-first century turns out to be a time of low (demographic and economic) growth and high return on capital (in a context of heightened international competition for capital resources), or at any rate in countries where these conditions hold true, inheritance will therefore probably again be as important as it was in the nineteenth century. An evolution in this direction is already apparent in France and a number of other European countries, where growth has already slowed considerably in recent decades. For the moment it is less prominent in the United States, essentially because demographic growth there is higher than in Europe. But if growth ultimately slows more or less everywhere in the coming century, as the median demographic forecasts by the United Nations (corroborated by other economic forecasts) suggest it will, then inheritance will probably take on increased importance throughout the world. — Thomas Piketty