Famous Quotes & Sayings

Lighters With Funny Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 8 famous quotes about Lighters With Funny with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Lighters With Funny Quotes

Lighters With Funny Quotes By Elbert Hubbard

You had better be a round peg in a square hole than a square peg in a square hole. The latter is in for life, while the first is only an indeterminate sentence. — Elbert Hubbard

Lighters With Funny Quotes By Frederick Lenz

Sisterhood is powerful. Woman can support each other as women, in their pursuit for enlightenment or anything else, without fear. But as long as she's still in the commodities exchange market, buying and selling, she must fear the competition. — Frederick Lenz

Lighters With Funny Quotes By William Trevor

The same applies to any artist; we are the tools and instruments of our talent. We are outsiders; we have no place in society because society is what we're watching, and dealing with. — William Trevor

Lighters With Funny Quotes By Eddie Murphy

In the original script, my character was a basketball player rather than a boxer. I didn't think I could pull that off. I'm a little short to be a basketball player! — Eddie Murphy

Lighters With Funny Quotes By Melina Marchetta

But she stepped forward and placed a finger to his lips and there it was before him. The greatest prayer to the gods he could muster with a heart so broken. Don't let me outlive this woman. Don't let me exist one moment without her. — Melina Marchetta

Lighters With Funny Quotes By Jeff Lindsay

I started my car and put Chase out of my mind as I nosed out into the merry brutality of Friday-night traffic in Miami. — Jeff Lindsay

Lighters With Funny Quotes By Debasish Mridha

The creator created women to control those wild, uncontrollable, intriguing men. — Debasish Mridha

Lighters With Funny Quotes By Marie De Rabutin-Chantal De Sevigne

It appears to me that in spite of myself I have been dragged to this inevitable point where old age must be undergone. I see it there before me; I have reached it; and I should at least like so to arrange matters that I do not move on, that I do not travel farther along this path of infirmities, pains, losses of memory and disfigurement. Their attack is at hand, and I hear a voice that says, 'You must go along, whatever you may say; or if indeed you will not, then you must die,' which is an extremity from which nature recoils. However, that is the fate of all who go on a little too far. — Marie De Rabutin-Chantal De Sevigne