Famous Quotes & Sayings

Tijm Quotes & Sayings

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Top Tijm Quotes

Tijm Quotes By R. Buckminster Fuller

It is new design by architects versus world revolution by political leadership. — R. Buckminster Fuller

Tijm Quotes By Karl Marx

Constant labor of one uniform kind destroys the intensity and flow of a man's animal spirits, which find recreation and delight in mere change of activity. — Karl Marx

Tijm Quotes By Warren W. Wiersbe

Opportunities energize the faithful and paralyze the fearful. — Warren W. Wiersbe

Tijm Quotes By Paul Doiron

No scientific proof can make someone stop hating something if their hatred gives them pleasure. — Paul Doiron

Tijm Quotes By Joan Frank

Lovers and even some family members may come and go but the friendships that take root abide. Sometimes the best of what is true survives as if it had an independent will: The coals of friendship keep themselves alive until something happens to rekindle them. — Joan Frank

Tijm Quotes By Janis Ian

I think all of us thought that by the '70s, at the latest the '80s, all the world's problems would be solved and everyone would be getting along fine. And instead we saw that Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated that year, Robert F. Kennedy died. We saw that it was going to be a lot more difficult than I think we had thought. — Janis Ian

Tijm Quotes By Verne Troyer

I felt probably more uncomfortable than Beyonce. But I can't answer for her. — Verne Troyer

Tijm Quotes By Iris Murdoch

The entry of a child into any situation changes the whole situation. — Iris Murdoch

Tijm Quotes By Bruce Springsteen

In the early years, I found a voice that was my voice and also partly my father's voice. But isn't that what you always do? Why do kids at 5 years old go into the closet and put their daddy's shoes on? Hey, my kids do it. — Bruce Springsteen

Tijm Quotes By Jean Rhys

The maid came in to light up and soon it would be time to go upstairs and change for dinner. I thought this woman one of the most fascinating I had ever seen. She had a long thin face, dead white, or powdered dead white. Her hair was black and lively under her cap, her eyes so small that the first time I saw her I thought she was blind. But wide open, they were the most astonishing blue, cornflower blue, no, more like sparks of blue fire. Then she would drop her eyelids and her face would go dead and lifeless again. I never tired of watching this transformation. — Jean Rhys