Famous Quotes & Sayings

Pinoy Tayo Quotes & Sayings

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Top Pinoy Tayo Quotes

Pinoy Tayo Quotes By John Keble

The watchful mother tarries nigh, though sleep has closed her infants eyes. — John Keble

Pinoy Tayo Quotes By Tony Iommi

I didn't follow any rules at all. I made my own. — Tony Iommi

Pinoy Tayo Quotes By Basil Bunting

Prose exists to convey meaning, and no meaning such as prose conveys can be expressed as well in poetry. That's not poetry's purpose. — Basil Bunting

Pinoy Tayo Quotes By Min-sik Choi

Western ghosts are evil, but Korean ghosts are about making peace. That is part of our Korean psyche. — Min-sik Choi

Pinoy Tayo Quotes By Ted Agon

Constant questioning produces a status quo of change. — Ted Agon

Pinoy Tayo Quotes By Umberto Eco

A dream is a scripture, and many scriptures are nothing but dreams. — Umberto Eco

Pinoy Tayo Quotes By Aristotle.

A human being is a naturally political [animal]. — Aristotle.

Pinoy Tayo Quotes By Marissa Meyer

She dreamed of deep soul connections and passionate kisses and daring escapades. She was certain that he simply had to meet her, just once, and he would feel the same way. It would be like those epic love affairs that exploded into existence and burned white hot for all eternity. The type of love that time and distance and even death couldn't separate. — Marissa Meyer

Pinoy Tayo Quotes By William Walker Atkinson

The occultist knows that this thought-atmosphere of a village, town, city, or nation is the composite thought of those dwelling in it or who have previously dwelt there. Strangers — William Walker Atkinson

Pinoy Tayo Quotes By Fyodor Dostoyevsky

For the limited 'ordinary' person there is, for example, nothing easier to imagine himself to be unusual and original person, and to take enjoyment in this without hesitation. Some of our young ladies need only have their hair cut short, put on some blue spectacles and call themselves nihilists in order to be instantly persuaded that, having donned the spectacles, they have at once begun to possess their own 'convictions'. Some men need only feel a drop of some universally human and good-natured feeling within their hearts in order to be instantly persuaded that no one feels as they do, that they are in the vanguard of public enlightenment. Others need only accept some idea by word of mouth or read a page of something without beginning or end in order to instantly believe that this 'their own idea' and has been conceived within their own brains. — Fyodor Dostoyevsky