Famous Quotes
473 Quotations with Therefore.
- 21. Johnson: One of the amusements of idleness is reading without the fatigue of attention, a ...
- 22. G. K. Chesterton: Truth must necessarily be stranger than fiction, for fiction is the creation of ...
- 23. Jeremy Taylor: He that speaketh against his own reason speaks against his own conscience, and t ...
- 24. Sidney Madwed: Trust: Just as you would not want to do business with someone you can't trust, t ...
- 25. Bible: Wisdom is the principal thing, therefore get wisdom; and with all thy getting, g ...
- 26. Rule of Life: It is certain that either wise bearing or ignorant carriage is caught, as men ta ...
- 27. Martin Heidegger: Teaching is more difficult than learning because what teaching calls for is this ...
- 28. Miles Kindera: 'I think therefore I am' is the statement of an intellectual who underrates toot ...
- 29. Liz Winston: I think, therefore I'm single.
- 30. Ambrose Bierce: BLANK-VERSE, n. Unrhymed iambic pentameters -- the most difficult kind of Englis ...
- 31. Ambrose Bierce: CARTESIAN, adj. Relating to Descartes, a famous philosopher, author of the celeb ...
- 32. Ambrose Bierce: HIPPOGRIFF, n. An animal (now extinct) which was half horse and half griffin. Th ...
- 33. Ambrose Bierce: INADMISSIBLE, adj. Not competent to be considered. Said of certain kinds of test ...
- 34. Ambrose Bierce: INNATE, adj. Natural, inherent -- as innate ideas, that is to say, ideas that we ...
- 35. Ambrose Bierce: LOGIC, n. The art of thinking and reasoning in strict accordance with the limita ...
- 36. Ambrose Bierce: MAN, n. An animal so lost in rapturous contemplation of what he thinks he is as ...
- 37. Ambrose Bierce: NOUMENON, n. That which exists, as distinguished from that which merely seems to ...
- 38. Ambrose Bierce: ROUNDHEAD, n. A member of the Parliamentarian party in the English civil war -- ...
- 39. Ambrose Bierce: SCARIFICATION, n. A form of penance practised by the mediaeval pious. The rite w ...
- 40. Ambrose Bierce: ZANY, n. A popular character in old Italian plays, who imitated with ludicrous i ...