Famous Quotes
1484 Quotations with Often.
- 181. Eric Hoffer: We often use strong language not to express a powerful emotion but to evoke it i ...
- 182. Samuel Johnson: There is no observation more frequently made by such as employ themselves in sur ...
- 183. Ray Kurzweil: Take death for example. A great deal of our effort goes into avoiding it. We mak ...
- 184. Kenneth Williams: The nice thing about quotes is that they give us a nodding acquaintance with the ...
- 185. Imam Ali-Ibn-Abi-Talib: He who is greedy is disgraced; he who discloses his hardship will always be humi ...
- 186. Frank Herbert: Ready comprehension is often a knee-jerk response and the most dangerous form of ...
- 187. Samuel P. Huntington: The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or religion ...
- 188. Don DeLillo: That which we fear to touch is often the fabric of our salvation.
- 189. Jane Austen: I cannot think well of a man who sports with any woman's feelings; and there may ...
- 190. Erich Fromm: Sleep is often the only occasion in which man cannot silence his conscience; we ...
- 191. Leo Buscaglia: Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a listeni ...
- 192. Henry David Thoreau: Heroes are often the most ordinary of men.
- 193. Shakti Gawain: When I'm trusting and being myself... everything in my life reflects this by fal ...
- 194. Janeane Garofalo: Many people feel that mass acceptance and smooth socialization are desirable lif ...
- 195. J. K. Rowling: Indifference and neglect often do much more damage than outright dislike.
- 196. Goldie Hawn: I have witnessed the softening of the hardest of hearts by a simple smile.
- 197. Walter V. Kaulfers: In human relations a little language goes farther than a little of almost anythi ...
- 198. Ralph Waldo Emerson: To laugh often and much; to win the respect of intelligent people and the affect ...
- 199. Barbara Mikkelson: Beware the pull on your heartstrings -- it's often the pursestrings that are act ...
- 200. George Eliot: What we call our despair is often only the painful eagerness of unfed hope.