Introductory Clause Quotes & Sayings
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Top Introductory Clause Quotes
I love you more than yesterday, less than tomorrow. — Edmond Rostand
If the goal is to build companies that maximize long-term equity value, then optimizing corporate performance in a way that Wall Street appreciates is obviously critical to that goal. — Bill Gurley
She's everything I wanted when I was young and everything I distrust now that I'm not. — Walter Kirn
Time passed again. I don't know how long. I had no watch. They don't make that kind of time in watches anyway. — Raymond Chandler
I suppose every old scholar has had the experience of reading something in a book which was significant to him, but which he could never find again. Sure he is that he read it there, but no one else ever read it, nor can he find it again, though he buy the book and ransack every page. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
For a 7-iron, you never want the ball to be closer to your left heel than just slightly ahead of the mid-point of your stance. That's especially true if you're a tall player, like me. — Ernie Els
It seems I have a knack for kink in ink. — Sai Marie Johnson
we are the kind of people who "don't do vulnerability," there's nothing that makes us feel more threatened and more incited to attack and shame people than to see someone daring greatly. — Brene Brown
His strength kept me moving forward, and it was also tearing me apart. — Rebecca Donovan
You can't fake listening. It shows. — Raquel Welch
Most fish require a short cooking time, but cephalopods are the exception to this fishy rule. As with some cuts of larger land beasts, the longer they're cooked, the more tender they get. — Yotam Ottolenghi
Bike lanes are clearly controversial. And one of the problems with bike lanes - and I'm generally a supporter of bike lanes - but one of the problems with bike lanes has been not the concept of them, which I support, but the way the Department of Transportation has implemented them without consultation with communities and community boards. — Christine Quinn
The introductory statement for Paul's famous paragraph on marriage in Ephesians is verse 21: "Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ."1 In English, this is usually rendered as a separate sentence, but that hides from readers an important point that Paul is making. In the Greek text, verse 21 is the last clause in the long previous sentence in which Paul describes several marks of a person who is "filled with the Spirit." The last mark of Spirit fullness is in this last clause: It is a loss of pride and self-will that leads a person to humbly serve others. From this Spirit-empowered submission of verse 21, Paul moves to the duties of wives and husbands. — Timothy J. Keller
My accident happened in what should have been one of the safest places to be: in a police station, at the hands of trained police officers. So more guns are not the answer. — James Langevin
Anxiety is the normality of our age, — Alex Colville
It is always reassuring to be disabused of one's own paranoia. — Muriel Barbery