Recognizable Disney Movie Quotes & Sayings
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Top Recognizable Disney Movie Quotes

By turning your eyes on God in meditation, your whole soul will be filled with God. Begin all your prayers in the presence of God. — Saint Francis De Sales

For cleverness and wisdom are as different as are the circuitous passages of a labyrinth and the straight, upward flight of a bird. — Evangeline Walton

Forgive. Such a small word. Only seven letters but they carry the weight of the world. — A Meredith Walters

The fighters who give it all will be around for next year. Give it all you've got. Don't save anything. — George Foreman

It's easy to find someone whom you can laugh with, but it's not easy to find someone whom you can endure the sadness together with. — Ika Natassa

After 'Pitch Perfect,' I only want to be in sequels. No. 2 of whatever. — Adam DeVine

Dub and reggae ... I play that a lot around the house. — Gavin Rossdale

The first thing is love: love deeply. If you have been with a person for a few years, in deep love, and you have experienced all the joys and all the miseries, and still you decide to be with the person, then marriage is okay. Because marriage is only a legal arrangement, it cannot make anything more beautiful than it is. It can only make it ugly, it cannot beautify it. Once it is settled legally, once you start taking each other for granted, things will start going down rather than rising high. — Rajneesh

Lawns are a form of television — Michael Pollan

My act is an exaggeration of a part of me. I'm much more expressive off stage. — Steven Wright

I am occasionally desired by congenital imbeciles and the editors of magazines to say something about the writing of detective fiction "from the woman's point of view." To such demands, one can only say "Go away and don't be silly. You might as well ask what is the female angle on an equilateral triangle. — Dorothy L. Sayers

A man is born; his first years go by in obscurity amid the pleasures or hardships of childhood. He grows up; then comes the beginning of manhood; finally society's gates open to welcome him; he comes into contact with his fellows. For the first time he is scrutinized and the seeds of the vices and virtues of his maturity are thought to be observed forming in him.
This is, if I am not mistaken, a singular error.
Step back in time; look closely at the child in the very arms of his mother; see the external world reflected for the first time in the yet unclear mirror of his understanding; study the first examples which strike his eyes; listen to the first word which arouse with him the slumbering power of thought; watch the first struggles which he has to undergo; only then will you comprehend the source of the prejudices, the habits, and the passions which are to rule his life. — Alexis De Tocqueville