Manira Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 13 famous quotes about Manira with everyone.
Top Manira Quotes

Your mind is a positive asset. Use it for positive thoughts. — Clark Terry

The trick is to surrender completely, take your moments when you get them, don't dare want for more. — Elisa Albert

A lot of my colleagues just don't really realize that they have to work in order to get the interest of an audience, especially with young kids, especially because it [classical music] is not that popular. You don't see it on TV, you don't hear it on radio, so you really gotta put an effort into promoting classical music. — David Garrett

Always care and love that which makes you happy. — Debasish Mridha

In the twenty-five years that have passed since the ending of the World War when the people of this country emerged from generations of humiliation under foreign occupation, we have accomplished much to our credit, overcome many difficulties and changed the course of our history. — Tunku Abdul Rahman

The cancer of time is eating us away — Henry Miller

Don't follow your dreams, chase them — Portia Sarris

I'm suspicious of people who don't like dogs, but I trust a dog when it doesn't like a person. — Bill Murray

When things are at their worst,
there are no tears. — Seneca.

With the weight of four thousand years of cannibalism bearing down upon me, even if I was once innocent how can I now face real humans? — Lu Xun

The sensations she was asking about were very pleasant; some of them were nothing short of delicious; but to know them one simply had to go barefoot. I could sense a mixture of envy and fearful reserve. It was time to tell her what another barefoot hiker had once told me, when I had stood, still shod, on the edge of wanting to go barefoot: Take off your shoes. — Richard Keith Frazine

You'd think all of these "atypical" somethings would add up to a typical something — Robin Williams

Music and dancing (the more the pity) have become so closely associated with ideas of riot and debauchery among the less cultivated classes, that a taste for them, for their own sakes, can hardly be said to exist, and before they can be recommended as innocent or safe amusements, a very great change of ideas must take place. — John Herschel