Famous Quotes & Sayings

Legana Christian Quotes & Sayings

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Top Legana Christian Quotes

Legana Christian Quotes By Brigid Schulte

As work weeks get longer and leisure time shrinks, people are becoming sicker, more distracted, absent, unproductive, and less innovative. — Brigid Schulte

Legana Christian Quotes By Ann Brashares

By day she studied and touched her mother's things, and by night, she dreamed about them. The dreams gave her as fragmented a vision of Marley as the boxes in the attic did. There were a thousand dramatic episodes, but very little sense of the person linking them together — Ann Brashares

Legana Christian Quotes By Richard Engel

Then someone cried out, "Suicide bomber!" The crowd panicked. In the ensuing stampede, terrified pilgrims ran in both directions, many colliding in the middle of the bridge. A side railing collapsed under their weight, and scores leaped into the water whether they could swim or not. Hundreds were trampled to death. More than a thousand died. Hundreds of pairs of sandals were scattered around the bridge, left behind when pilgrims made their desperate dives into the river. I was given all of seventy-five seconds to tell the story on the Nightly News. — Richard Engel

Legana Christian Quotes By Pepper Phillips

An old expression
'she looks like she was weaned on a pickle'
came to my mind. — Pepper Phillips

Legana Christian Quotes By Sean McMullen

Guns were the symbols of judgment and power, so that those who were expected to exercise power and judgment had to wear them and be proficient in their use. — Sean McMullen

Legana Christian Quotes By Ellen Johnson Sirleaf

Women work harder. And women are more honest; they have less reasons to be corrupt. — Ellen Johnson Sirleaf

Legana Christian Quotes By Peter Zumthor

If a work of architecture consists of forms and contents that combine to create a strong fundamental mood powerful enough to affect us, it may possess the qualities of a work of art. This art has, however, nothing to do with interesting configurations or originality. It is concerned with insights and understanding, and above all truth. Perhaps poetry is unexpected truth. It lives in stillness. Architecture's artistic task is to give this still expectancy a form. The building itself is never poetic. At most, it may possess subtle qualities, which, at certain moments, permit us to understand something that we were never able to understand in quite this way before. — Peter Zumthor