Famous Quotes
2900 Quotations with Human.
- 1941. Author Unknown: There is one pleasure that the human being cannot tire of and that is the pleasu ...
- 1942. C. Fitzhugh: There is something in sorrow more akin to the course of human affairs than joy.
- 1943. Emmeline Pankhurst: There is something that Governments care for far more than human life, and that ...
- 1944. Carl Edward Sagan: There is today -- in a time when old beliefs are withering -- a kind of philosop ...
- 1945. Mark Twain: There isn't a single human characteristic that can be safely labeled as "America ...
- 1946. Warren Buffett: There seems to be some perverse human characteristic that likes to make easy thi ...
- 1947. Katherine Anne Porter: There seems to be a kind of order in the universe, in the movement of the stars ...
- 1948. Benjamin Haydon: There surely is in human nature an inherent propensity to extract all the good o ...
- 1949. Percy Bysshe Shelley: There was no corn -- in the wide market-place all loathliest things, even human ...
- 1950. Bertrand Russell: There will still be things that machines cannot do. They will not produce great ...
- 1951. Robert J. Ringer: There's a basic human weakness inherent in all people which tempts them to want ...
- 1952. Malcolm Muggeridge: There's nothing is this world more instinctively abhorrent to me than finding my ...
- 1953. Carson McCullers: There's nothing that makes you so aware of the improvisation of human existence ...
- 1954. William Hazlitt: They are, as it were, train-bearers in the pageant of life, and hold a glass up ...
- 1955. Robert Frost: They cannot scare me with their empty spaces between stars -- on stars where no ...
- 1956. Thomas Brackett Reed: They never open their mouths without subtracting from the sum of human knowledge ...
- 1957. Harry Lorayne: Thinking clearly and effectively is the greatest asset of any human being. We ar ...
- 1958. Malcolm Muggeridge: This horror of pain is a rather low instinct and... if I think of human beings I ...
- 1959. Bertrand Russell: This idea of weapons of mass exterminations utterly horrible and is something wh ...
- 1960. Walter Lippmann: This is one of the paradoxes of the democratic movement -- that it loves a crowd ...