Kutipan Dari Quotes & Sayings
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Top Kutipan Dari Quotes

The sea had a way of re-energizing, of refreshing, of making one feel stronger and able to conquer life's ups and downs. They each let the strength of it seep in as they pieced the puzzle together. — J. Dana Stahl

Sitting down to a meal with an Indian family is different from sitting down to a meal with a British family. — Roland Joffe

A fighter with heart will almost always win out against a fighter with skill but no will. — Chuck Liddell

In the hands of a passive-aggressive person who wants to abdicate responsibility for things, texting is a great tool. You can really go nuts. — Mallory Ortberg

I do actually like Los Angeles. Partly because I was told I wouldn't. — Hugh Laurie

When we step in the name of love, we cannot rhyme if we don't have the same RHYTHM, and we cannot have the same rhythm if we are not listening to the same BEAT.
It takes someone who understands the rhythm and melody of your "heartbeat" to dance to it. — Olaotan Fawehinmi

The ideas by which people ... interpret their existence and in measure guide their behavior, were not forged in a world of wealth. — John Kenneth Galbraith

Am so deeply impressed with the fair mindedness and tolerance of the American people ... — Virchand Gandhi

A door opens, and hot white light floods the room, blinding him momentarily. He blinks and blinks until the world re-forms. — Anonymous

People want to see comedies where characters aren't sacrificed for the jokes. — Jenny Slate

Dr. Weiss stood. "There are two things you need to know right off the bat: The first is that it takes great courage to admit fear or that you need hep. Just by being here, you've proven that you have the courage. And the second id that we never get what we wish for - ever." He shrugged. "We get what we work for." He looked into David's eyes. "Are you prepared to put in the work, David McClain? — Steven Manchester

New power meant a new relation to time. The lending of money against interest was considered "against nature" by the
Church: money naturally was a means of exchange to buy necessities, not a capital that could work or bear fruits. During the seventeenth century even the Church abandoned this view-though reluctantly
to accept the fact that Christians had become capitalist merchants. Time became like money: I now can have a few hours before lunch; how shall I spend time? . I am
short of time so I can't afford to spend that much time on a committee; it's not worth the time ... It world be a waste of time; I'd rather save an hour — Ivan Illich