Militaria For Sale Quotes & Sayings
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Top Militaria For Sale Quotes

Pick me up, is the message of a person who keeps falling. Tomas kept picking her up, patiently. — Milan Kundera

Ah, it was a fine night, a warm night, a wine-drinking night, a moony night, and a night to hug your girl and talk and spit and be heavengoing. — Jack Kerouac

I was always interested in science, and pre-med was arespectable thing to do while I ursued my songwriting. — Neil Diamond

Oh, God - the lives people try to lead.
Oh, God - what a world they try to lead them in. — Kurt Vonnegut

Every once in a while, a cookbook comes along that simply knocks me out. — Ina Garten

In the ancient Book of History, upon which Confucius himself based his philosophy, it is said ...
The people must be cherished,
The people must not be oppressed,
The people are the root of the country.
If the root is firm, the country is tranquil.
And you remember, she continued, that, when asked which was most important to a state, food, weapons or the trust of the people, the sage replied that weapons could be given up, and even food be sacrificed, but the state itself would be destroyed if the people had no confidence in it. — Pearl S. Buck

But I realized now that love was more than a feeling. Love was something you did for another person ... — Sherry Jones

Tension seemed natural to her, not a sign of anxiety, but a sign of enjoyment ... — Ayn Rand

admiral. Technically, all admirals come from the Arabian desert, for the word can be traced to the title of Abu Bakr, who was called Amir-al-muminin, "commander of the faithful," before he succeeded Muhammad as caliph in 632. The title Amir, or "commander," became popular soon after, and naval chiefs were designated Amir-al-ma, "commander of commanders." Western seamen who came in contact with the Arabs assumed that Amir-al was one word, and believed this was a distinguished title. By the early 13th century, officers were calling themselves amiral, which merely means "commander of." The d was probably added to the word through a common mispronunciation. — Robert Hendrickson