Famous Quotes & Sayings

Wikipedia Greek Quotes & Sayings

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Top Wikipedia Greek Quotes

Wikipedia Greek Quotes By Matthew Clark

All the world's religions speak the same language, they simply use different words. — Matthew Clark

Wikipedia Greek Quotes By Jerry Falwell

The Bible is a love story. Time and time again it illustrates how much God loves the world in spite of its sinful disobedience...The last book of the Bible, the Revelation of St John the Divine, creates a beautiful and yet terrifying picture of those last days when God will reveal Himself in judgment and in grace to all creation. — Jerry Falwell

Wikipedia Greek Quotes By Terry Pratchett

You know how to pray, don't you? Just put your hands together and hope. — Terry Pratchett

Wikipedia Greek Quotes By Aesop

A Fox entered the house of an actor and, rummaging through all his properties, came upon a Mask, an admirable imitation of a human head. He placed his paws on it and said, "What a beautiful head! Yet it is of no value, as it entirely lacks brains." — Aesop

Wikipedia Greek Quotes By Trombone Shorty

There's a lot of music at my fingertips that I can be influenced by. And just because I play a horn, I don't need to sound, or try to capture, what was happening before me. I can just respect it and learn from it. — Trombone Shorty

Wikipedia Greek Quotes By Georgette Heyer

You don't understand!" she exclaimed bitterly.

"That," said his lordship, with a touch of acidity, "is a foolish accusation which lacks even the saving grace of originality! Every generation, my child, has said, or thought, that the preceding one was devoid of understanding or experience. — Georgette Heyer

Wikipedia Greek Quotes By Mario Vargas-Llosa

A person who does not read, or reads little, or reads only trash, is a person with an impediment: he can speak much but he will say little, because his vocabulary is deficient in the means for self-expression.
This is not only a verbal limitation. It represents also a limitation in intellect and imagination. It is a poverty of thought, for the simple reason that ideas, the concepts through which we grasp the secrets of our condition, do not exist apart from words. — Mario Vargas-Llosa