Famous Quotes
168 Quotations with Frequent.
- 81. Winston Churchill: In those days he was wiser than he is now -- he used frequently to take my advic ...

- 82. William Ellery Channing: Innocent amusements are such as excite moderately, and such as produce a cheerfu ...

- 83. Malcolm De Chazal: Laughter, while it lasts, slackens and unbraces the mind, weakens the faculties ...

- 84. Norman Lear: Life is made up of small pleasures. Happiness is made up of those tiny successes ...

- 85. Thomas A. Edison: Maturity is often more absurd than youth and very frequently is most unjust to y ...

- 86. Mary Kay Ash: Most people frequently encounter negative people in their lives and negative pro ...

- 87. Ben Hecht: Much more frequent in Hollywood than the emergence of Cinderella is her sudden v ...

- 88. Omar Khayyam: Myself when young did eagerly frequent doctor and saint, and heard great argumen ...

- 89. Walter Richard Sickert: Nothing knits man to man like the frequent passage from hand to hand of cash.

- 90. Walter Richard Sickert: Nothing knits man to man like the frequent passage from hand to hand of cash.

- 91. Dr. Alexis Carrel: One must train oneself, by small and frequent efforts, to dominate one's feeling ...

- 92. Peter Russell: Paradoxically one of the greatest advantages of mind maps is that they are seldo ...

- 93. Peter Russell: Paradoxically one of the greatest advantages of mind maps is that they are seldo ...

- 94. Thomas Arnold: Probably the happiest period in life most frequently is in middle age, when the ...

- 95. Yvor Winters: Professors of literature, who for the most part are genteel but mediocre men, ca ...

- 96. Captain J. G. Stedman: Such indeed is the superior longevity of the fair females of Surinam, compared t ...

- 97. Samuel Johnson: That observation which is called knowledge of the world will be found much more ...

- 98. Bess Myerson: The accomplice to the crime of corruption is frequently our own indifference.

- 99. Bess Myerson: The accomplice to the crime of corruption is frequently our own indifference.

- 100. Henry Ward Beecher: The continuance and frequent fits of anger produce in the soul a propensity to b ...
