Unrepresentative Examples Quotes & Sayings
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Top Unrepresentative Examples Quotes

I may not be saying this everyday. But i want to Thank You for all that you do! I Love You! — Stanley Alexander De Smith

To feel is to be vulnerable. To believe vulnerability is weakness is to believe that feeling is weakness. — Brene Brown

What a degraded cosmos. What a case of something starting out nice and going bad. — George Saunders

Facing death means facing the ultimate question of the meaning of life. If we really want to live we must have the courage to recognize that life is ultimately very short, and that everything we do counts. — Elisabeth Kubler-Ross

I think when dishes have a certain amount of acidity, really they are very alive. And I love things that are alive. — Jose Andres

With the possible exception of God during the writing of the Bible, every writer in history has needed an editor. So do you. — Donald Davis

When people think about 'thinking,' they often think 'academia;' they think 'threat.' They think 'coldness.' I want to reverse all those images and say, 'No, the brain God gave you is intended to throw fuel on the fire of your affections for God. It's really good at it if you let it.' — John Piper

I was raised on Josh White, the Weavers and Pete Seeger. The music was everywhere. You'd go to a party at somebody's apartment and there would be fifty people there, singing well into the night. — Mary Travers

So many lives are in bitterness today not just because of how their pasts were abused, but how they think they were innocent. — Ernest Agyemang Yeboah

I would rather people understand that there is a very, very fortunate American who was given the opportunity, and was in the right place at the right time to have the moment of a lifetime. My mother was born - her name was Marianne Moon. And she was born in 1903, the year that the Wright Brothers first flew. — Buzz Aldrin

Mrs Grayshott was no tattle-monger; and since she had a great deal of reserve Abby knew that only a stringent sense of duty could have forced her to overcome her distaste of talebearing. What she knew, either from her own observation, or from the innocent disclosures of her daughter, she plainly thought to be too serious to be withheld from Fanny's aunt. At the same time, thought Abigail, dispassionately considering her, the well-bred calm of her manners concealed an over-anxious disposition, which led her to magnify possible dangers. — Georgette Heyer