Famous Quotes & Sayings

Sonia Name Quotes & Sayings

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Top Sonia Name Quotes

Sonia Name Quotes By Theodor Adorno

In the age of the individual's liquidation, the question of individuality must be raised anew. — Theodor Adorno

Sonia Name Quotes By Sonia Sanchez

3.
i have told
you my name
so there is
tomorrow.
4.
see me through
your own eyes
i am here. — Sonia Sanchez

Sonia Name Quotes By Sonia Johnson

I liked the name of the amendment. I couldn't help feeling uneasy that the church was opposing something with a name as beautiful as the Equal Rights Amendment. — Sonia Johnson

Sonia Name Quotes By Arthur Conan Doyle

Honesty and Poetry are the same thing — Arthur Conan Doyle

Sonia Name Quotes By Mary Margaret Funk

When tears come, I breathe deeply and rest. I know I am swimming in a hallowed stream where many have gone before. I am not alone, crazy, or having a nervous breakdown . . . My heart is at work. My soul is awake. — Mary Margaret Funk

Sonia Name Quotes By Sonia Johnson

I like to remind people what radical means
'at the root of things.' It shouldn't be considered a pejorative. There isn't a great name out of history you can pick who wasn't 'radical. — Sonia Johnson

Sonia Name Quotes By Margaret Culkin Banning

Cleaning up with children around is like shoveling during a blizzard — Margaret Culkin Banning

Sonia Name Quotes By Catherine The Great

The most sure, but at the same time the most difficult expedient to mend the morals of the people, is a perfect system of education. — Catherine The Great

Sonia Name Quotes By Leo Tolstoy

... and in the same way the innumerable people who took part in the war acted in accord with their personal characteristics, habits, circumstances and aims. They were moved by fear or vanity, rejoiced or were indignant, reasoned, imagining that they knew what they were doing and did it of their own free will, but they all were involuntary tools of history, carrying on a work concealed from them but comprehensible to us. Such is the inevitable fate of men of action, and the higher they stand in the social hierarchy the less are they free. — Leo Tolstoy