Osobine Quotes & Sayings
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Top Osobine Quotes

With each opportunity before me, God presented me with a choice. I could accept His offerings, His wisdom, His grace. Or I could choose to hold onto the pain, the anger and the resentment a little longer. — Sharon E. Rainey

Each man must work for himself, and unless he so works, no outside help can avail him. — Theodore Roosevelt

One of the laudable by-products of the Freudian quackery is the discovery that lying, in most cases, is involuntary and inevitable
that the liar can no more avoid it than he can avoid blinking his eyes when a light flashes or jumping when a bomb goes off behind him. — H.L. Mencken

I am of course getting angry if biologists try to use the general concept 'chance' in order to explain phenomena which are so typical for living organisms as, for instance, those appearing in the biological evolution. — Wolfgang Paul

I would go on summer vacations visiting family all over the world. — Joakim Noah

Borunia: Why do you want to be my friend?
Samarga: I want to know if we can be friends. — Toba Beta

If he who breaks the law is not punished, he who obeys it is cheated. This, and this alone, is why lawbreakers ought to be punished: to authenticate as good, and to encourage as useful, law-abiding behavior. The aim of criminal law cannot be correction or deterrence; it can only be the maintenance of the legal order. — Thomas Szasz

I like to be surrounded by harmonies and fullness and richness and vitality. — Al Jardine

The Republican leadership thinks the best way to avoid losing elections is to let the Democrats win every controversial issue. — Rush Limbaugh

You're my love, you're my lighthouse; and the sea is rough and in the dark days. — Kristian Goldmund Aumann

For there is no folly so great as keeping one's sorrows hidden. — Anthony Trollope

Not all paths lead to God, but God can lead any path to himself. This God will dine with anyone. — Ricky Maye

Sea. Nothing could offer more striking contrasts than the country on either bank. On the east, the ground rises abruptly to a height of about 3000 feet, resembling a natural rampart flanked with towers and bastions: behind this extends an immense table-land, slightly undulating and intersected in all — A.H. Sayce

During my eighty-seven years I have witnessed a whole succession of technological revolutions. But none of them has done away with the need for character in the individual or the ability to think. — Bernard Baruch