Propeller Aircraft Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 14 famous quotes about Propeller Aircraft with everyone.
Top Propeller Aircraft Quotes

But more often than not the missing face has been sucked into the engines of the Nazi death machine, like an unlucky lapwing hitting the propeller of a Lancaster bomber-nothing left but feathers blowing away in the aircraft's wake, as if those warm wings and beating heart had never existed. — Elizabeth Wein

What probably confuses people is they know a lot about me, but it quite pleases me that there's more they don't know. — Bjork

I just sing the stuff that makes me smile, makes me feel like I didn't sell myself out. — Patti LaBelle

I need a girl who will put me in my place, but I also want to laugh and have a good time. — Damian McGinty

If you want to attack someone you attack their family. That is easy. You don't have to say directly. — Patrick Gaubert

Irony is a qualification of subjectivity. — Soren Kierkegaard

The fortress inspired a tremendous confidence. It was the only propeller driven aircraft I have flown that was completely viceless; there were no undesirable flight characteristics. The directional stability was excellent and, properly trimmed, the B-17 could be taken off, landed and banked without change of trim. — James Weldon Johnson

As you grow up, you become more comfortable with your own peccadilloes, and I'm bad with people who aren't self-motivated. And now, when I see them coming, I run the other way. — Bing Gordon

I made a written report which is still today in existence. I have a photocopy of it, and I am saying that in production this aircraft could perhaps substitute for three propeller- driven aircraft of the best existing type. This was my impression. — Adolf Galland

It's just a mistake, you understand you don't ya??... and Hello, father 33 days from your dead! — Deyth Banger

I'm not a fan of 'Gone With the Wind.' I didn't like the movie. I didn't like the book. — Octavia Spencer

Nelson and Winter had spent more than a decade examining how companies work, trudging through swamps of data before arriving at their central conclusion: "Much of firm behavior," they wrote, is best "understood as a reflection of general habits and strategic orientations coming from the firm's past," rather than "the result of a detailed survey of the remote twigs of the decision tree."6.15 — Charles Duhigg