Famous Quotes
4607 Quotations with Most.
- 3221. Susanna Moodie: What a wonderful faculty is memory! -- the most mysterious and inexplicable in t ...
- 3222. Jean de La Fontaine: What a wonderful thing it is to have a good friend. He identifies your innermost ...
- 3223. Ted W. Engstrom: What do you want to get done? In what order of importance? Over what period of t ...
- 3224. William James: What every genuine philosopher (every genuine man, in fact) craves most is prais ...
- 3225. Anatole France: What frightens us most in a madman is his sane conversation.
- 3226. A. W. Tozer: What I believe about God is the most important thing about me.
- 3227. Charles F. Kettering: What I believe is that, by proper effort, we make the future almost anything we ...
- 3228. St. Augustine: What I needed most was to love and to be loved, eager to be caught. Happily I wr ...
- 3229. Henry David Thoreau: What is a country without rabbits and partridges? They are among the most simple ...
- 3230. Salvador Dali: What is a television apparatus to man, who has only to shut his eyes to see the ...
- 3231. Georg C. Lichtenberg: What is called an acute knowledge of human nature is mostly nothing but the obse ...
- 3232. Leonard Cohen: What is most original in a man's nature is often that which is most desperate. T ...
- 3233. John Boorman: What is passion? It is surely the becoming of a person. Are we not, for most of ...
- 3234. Andre Sinyavsky: What is the most precious, the most exciting smell awaiting you in the house whe ...
- 3235. Mark Twain: What is the most rigorous law of our being? Growth. No smallest atom of our mora ...
- 3236. John McEnroe: What is the single most important quality in a tennis champion? I would have to ...
- 3237. Dr Edward Mayhew: What is the use of this fuss about morality when the issue only involves a horse ...
- 3238. Friedrich Nietzsche: What is the vanity of the vainest man compared with the vanity which the most mo ...
- 3239. Doris Lessing: What matters most is that we learn from living.
- 3240. James Russell Lowell: What men prize most is a privilege, even if it be that of chief mourner at a fun ...