Vislumbre Dicionario Quotes & Sayings
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Top Vislumbre Dicionario Quotes

Let me tell you something - compared to a TV-drama production schedule, touring is not strenuous. — LL Cool J

I groan daily under a body of sin and corruption. Oh for the time when I shall drop this flesh, and be free from sin! — Charles Spurgeon

Experiments that measure readers' comprehension times to the thousandth of a second have shown that singular they causes little or no delay, but generic he slows them down a lot. — Steven Pinker

The main problem in marriage is that for a man sex is a hunger like eating. If the man is hungry and can't get to a fancy French restaurant, he goes to a hot dog stand. For a woman, what is important is love and romance. — Joan Fontaine

She looked as if she'd swallowed an assortment of her own hangnails. — Gregory Maguire

I go out every night with a homemade sextant and sight Deneb. It's kind of silly if you think about it. I'm in my space suit on Mars and I'm navigating with sixteenth-century tools. But hey, they work. — Andy Weir

How ugly most people are! It's a pity they don't try to make up for it by being agreeable. — W. Somerset Maugham

Looked excitingly purposeful, with large video screens ranged over the control and guidance system panels on the concave wall, and long banks of computers set into the convex wall. In one corner a robot sat humped, — Douglas Adams

Your beautiful don't let anyone tell you different — Marilyn Manson

Tradition is a kind of mental illness with a clear symptom of repetition — Mehmet Murat Ildan

We have to be on guard that we don't spend so much time worrying about terrorism and guarding ourselves that we start to lose the essence of who we are as an open, freedom-loving people, welcoming to the rest of the world. — Colin Powell

Evil being the root of mystery, pain is the root of knowledge. — Simone Weil

A strange effect of marriage, such as the nineteenth century has made it! The boredom of married life inevitably destroys love, when love has preceded marriage. And yet, as a philosopher has observed, it speedily brings about, among people who are rich enough not to have to work, an intense boredom with all quiet forms of enjoyment. And it is only dried up hearts, among women, that it does not predispose to love. — Stendhal