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Wag Kang Magselos Quotes & Sayings

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Top Wag Kang Magselos Quotes

Wag Kang Magselos Quotes By Jodi Ellen Malpas

What is your thing?" "You." That's easy. "You are my thing. — Jodi Ellen Malpas

Wag Kang Magselos Quotes By Graeme Base

I hope that there's a difference between being childish and childlike and that I'm the latter, if you take my meaning. I often sort of wonder. I don't think I'm a terribly good grown-up; I don't take responsibility easily or well in many areas of life. Finance and stuff like that, I'm absolutely appalling. — Graeme Base

Wag Kang Magselos Quotes By Patrick Cogen

deal with stress, you have two options: to change the situation or to change your attitude towards the situation. — Patrick Cogen

Wag Kang Magselos Quotes By L.M. Montgomery

Anyone who has gumption knows what it is, and anyone who hasn't can never know what it is. So there is no need of defining it. — L.M. Montgomery

Wag Kang Magselos Quotes By Erin Hunter

Tigerclaw flicked his tail. How who were? — Erin Hunter

Wag Kang Magselos Quotes By Gerald O. West

The real desire [of feminism] is to break away from rationalism, androcentrisim and all forms of philosophy and practices that discriminate against women. The objective is to recover the use of senses, desire, taste, pleasure, pain and the mystery of life. It is a point of view which seeks to reflet with the body, that is, with sensitivity, with sexuality and, finally, with the story of the body itself. ~ Valmar Da Silva in Reading Other-Wise p. 125 — Gerald O. West

Wag Kang Magselos Quotes By George Hillocks

...[T]he inherent polysemous character of language and the necessity of interpreting language according to one's personal understandings eliminate the possibility of infusing one's sentiments directly into the mind of another. At the same time, these characteristics of language and its interpretations suggest that no text ought ever to be thought complete. We can never manage to complete our ideas, to work out their full implications, to recognize their inadequacies, or to say what 'we really meant.' Further, since anything we say can be challenged, as Graff (1992b) points out, we can never manage to meet all the possible challenges. Such an idea may seem to be an unbearable problem. But we have always lived with these conditions. We have simply ignored them. — George Hillocks