Famous Quotes
5379 Quotations with Over.
- 2561. Don Marquis: Persian pussy from over the sea demure and lazy and smug and fat none of your ri ...
- 2562. Jeane Kirkpatrick: Personal virtue is a good in itself, but it is not a sufficient means to an end ...
- 2563. William C. McGinly: Personally choosing to have time over having money makes giving more enjoyable.
- 2564. William C. McGinly: Personally choosing to have time over having money makes giving more enjoyable.
- 2565. George Eliot: Perspective, as its inventor remarked, is a beautiful thing. What horrors of dam ...
- 2566. Douglas M. Lawson: Philanthropy flows from a loving heart not an overstuffed pocketbook.
- 2567. Robert L. Payton: Philanthropy is the duty of how we should behave when things go wrong for people ...
- 2568. Francois de La Rochefoucauld: Philosophy easily triumphs over past and future evils; but present evils triumph ...
- 2569. Elizabeth Bowen: Pity the selfishness of lovers: it is brief, a forlorn hope; it is impossible.
- 2570. Lucretius: Pleasant it is, when over a great sea the winds trouble the waters, to gaze from ...
- 2571. Lucretius: Pleasant it to behold great encounters of warfare arrayed over the plains, with ...
- 2572. John Selden: Pleasures are all alike simply considered in themselves: he that hunts, or he th ...
- 2573. Charles de Montesquieu: Political liberty is to be found only in moderate governments.
- 2574. Nikita S. Khrushchev: Politicians are the same all over. They promise to build A bridge even where the ...
- 2575. Author Unknown: Politicians should never put themselves first: governments should put people fir ...
- 2576. Wilson Mizner: Popularity is exhausting. The life of the party almost always winds up in a corn ...
- 2577. George Steiner: Pornographers subvert this last, vital privacy; they do our imagining for us. Th ...
- 2578. Robert H. Schuller: Possibilitizing is overcoming while you're undergoing.
- 2579. Ralph Waldo Emerson: Poverty consist in feeling poor.
- 2580. Antipater: Poverty does not mean the possession of little but the non-possession of much.