Sinjin Smith Quotes & Sayings
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Top Sinjin Smith Quotes

Of all the reader questions I get each week, the most common question I get is, 'What are you wearing?' — Katherine Schwarzenegger

When I was about five, I could do a vaguely decent American accent - straight through kind of decent - and 'Hercules' needed some kids. I definitely wasn't a good actor. — Rose McIver

World War II, the atomic bomb, the Cold War, made it hard for Americans to continue their optimism. — Stephen Ambrose

If I ever had twins, I'd use one for parts. — Steven Wright

My truest passion is writing, so I continue to do that on my own while seeing what all the buzz is about being in front of the camera. — Dylan Penn

A television chat show is light entertainment, so it is trivial by its very nature. It is hardly the place to get people to reveal their innermost thoughts. Then it becomes sensationalism, and you lower yourself to the level of the popular newspapers. — Terry Wogan

Death is the destiny. — Lailah Gifty Akita

Don't be concerned about the outward beauty that depends on fancy hairstyles, expensive jewelry, or beautiful clothes. You should be known for the beauty that comes from within, the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is so precious to God. 1 PETER 3:3-4 — Francine Rivers

Their foreign policy is so disjointed, confusing, and chaotic that, really, people need to reexamine those who want to be involved in every war. — Barack Obama

It was almost as if reality had finally caught up to us, as if up until this point we'd actually had a chance of escaping it. — Rhonda James

Lying about what you want out of marriage going in because you're afraid you'll lose the relationship if you are honest is one of the worst kinds of fraud you could ever commit. — Gary L. Thomas

In his life, a man can change wives, political parties or religions but he cannot change his favourite soccer team. — Eduardo Galeano

Where others teach that man does not find himself until he finds God, John Paul gives an empathetic yes and then adds this: Man does not become his truest and most real self unless and John Paul believed that man is by nature part of a whole, that he does not exist alone. He lives in society with other men, who are, like him, God's children. And it is in giving to man, in giving until it hurts, that man in the deepest way finds God. For God himself is a constant giving. (p 126-127) — Peggy Noonan