Famous Quotes
600 Quotations with Almost.
- 101. Eric Hoffer: A grievance is most poignant when almost redressed.

- 102. Horace Mann: A house without books is like a room without windows. No man has a right to brin ...

- 103. Russell Lynes: A lady is nothing very specific. One man's lady is another man's woman; sometime ...

- 104. Charles M. Schwab: A man can succeed at almost anything for which he has unlimited enthusiasm.

- 105. George Santayana: A man's memory may almost become the art of continually varying and misrepresent ...

- 106. William Wordsworth: A multitude of causes unknown to former times are now acting with a combined for ...

- 107. Graham Greene: A murderer is regarded by the conventional world as something almost monstrous, ...

- 108. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: A person can stand almost anything except a succession of ordinary days.

- 109. B.C. Forbes: A price has to be paid for success. Almost invariably those who have reached the ...

- 110. Bill Vaughan: A three year old child is a being who gets almost as much fun out of a fifty-six ...

- 111. Antoinette Brown Blackwell: A woman finds the natural lay of the land almost unconsciously; and not feeling ...

- 112. Friedrich Nietzsche: Again and again I am brought up against it, and again and again I resist it: I d ...

- 113. Samuel Insull: Aim for the top. There is plenty of room there. There are so few at the top it i ...

- 114. Carson McCullers: All men are lonely. But sometimes it seems to me that we Americans are the lonel ...

- 115. Roger Bacon: All science requires mathematics. The knowledge of mathematical things is almost ...

- 116. Evelyn Waugh: Almost all crime is due to the repressed desire for aesthetic expression.

- 117. Francois de La Rochefoucauld: Almost all of our faults are more excusable than the means we take to hide them.

- 118. Arthur Schopenhauer: Almost all of our sorrows spring out of our relations with other people.

- 119. Francois de La Rochefoucauld: Almost all our faults are more pardonable than the methods we resort to them.

- 120. Virginia Woolf: Almost any biographer, if he respects facts, can give us much more than another ...
