Overrating Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 11 famous quotes about Overrating with everyone.
Top Overrating Quotes

Lovely chatting with you, darling, but I've got to run. Face it, you're always more content when you're chasing me than when you have me locked up. I think we're going to have a lot of fun. — Chelsea Cain

I understand the feelings of critics asked to come up with the ten best films of any year, who say, Ten? Ten's a lot! - and those more generous spirits whose thumbs grow as long as Pinocchio's nose from overrating a lot of pictures, because they want the medium to do well, and because they'd like to feel good about it. — Edward Jay Epstein

Never underrate the boss! The boss may look illiterate. He may look stupid. But there is no risk at all in overrating a boss. If you underrate him he will bitterly resent it or impute to you the deficiency in brains and knowledge you imputed to him. — Peter Drucker

I hope I can make a show that will inspire a whole other generation of young women and girls to say, "I can do a show like that." — Amanda De Cadenet

I spent a long time trying to find my center until I looked closely at it one night & found it had wheels and moved easily in the slightest breeze. So now I spend less time sitting and more time sailing. — Brian Andreas

Love gives without taking — Erica Jong

You can tell the greatness of a man by what makes him angry — Abraham Lincoln

There are certain people who seem doomed to buy certain houses. The house expects them. It waits for them. — Peter Ackroyd

Strange evolution, that people have come to believe
that we are its greatest achievement
when really we're just a collection of cells overrating themselves — Dave Matthews Band

Taste is only to be educated by contemplation, not of the tolerably good but of the truly excellent. I therefore show you only the best works; and when you are grounded in these, you will have a standard for the rest, which you will know how to value, without overrating them. — Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

Pride differs in many things from vanity, and by gradations that never blend, although they may be somewhat indistinguishable. Pride may perhaps be termed a too high opinion of ourselves founded on the overrating of certain qualities that we do actually possess; whereas vanity is more easily satisfied, and can extract a feeling of self-complacency from qualifications that are imaginary. — Charles Caleb Colton