Famous Quotes
2798 Quotations with Sure.
- 1141. Lord Byron: It is singular how soon we lose the impression of what ceases to be constantly b ...
- 1142. Jean Rostand: It is sometimes important for science to know how to forget the things she is su ...
- 1143. Charles Horton Cooley: It is surely a matter of common observation that a man who knows no one thing in ...
- 1144. St. Francis De Sales: It is the mark of a mean, vulgar and ignoble spirit to dwell on the thought of f ...
- 1145. Epictetus: It is the nature of the wise to resist pleasures, but the foolish to be a slave ...
- 1146. Hugo Black: It is the paradox of life that the way to miss pleasure is to seek it first. The ...
- 1147. Robert Rawls: It is the risk element which ensures security. Risk brings out the ingenuity and ...
- 1148. Marcus Annaeus Seneca: It is the sign of a great mind to dislike greatness, and prefer things in measur ...
- 1149. Graham Greene: It is the story-teller's task to elicit sympathy and a measure of understanding ...
- 1150. Jean de La Fontaine: It is twice the pleasure to deceive the deceiver.
- 1151. Charles Baudelaire: It is unfortunately very true that, without leisure and money, love can be no mo ...
- 1152. Thomas Wolfe: It is very comforting to believe that leaders who do terrible things are, in fac ...
- 1153. Theodore Parker: It is very sad for a man to make himself servant to a single thing; his manhood ...
- 1154. Samuel Johnson: It is very strange, and very melancholy, that the paucity of human pleasures sho ...
- 1155. Arnold Bennett: It is within the experience of everyone that when pleasure and pain reach a cert ...
- 1156. Jean Webster: It isn't the big pleasures that count the most; it's making a great deal out of ...
- 1157. Jean Rostand: It may offend us to hear our own thoughts expressed by others: we are not sure e ...
- 1158. Midge Decter: It might sound a paradoxical thing to say -- for surely never has a generation o ...
- 1159. Samuel Johnson: It seems not more reasonable to leave the right of printing unrestrained, becaus ...
- 1160. E. J. Hobsbawm: It seems that American patriotism measures itself against an outcast group. The ...