19256 Quotations with Thin.
- 5781. Alexander Pope: Fondly we think we honor merit then, When we but praise ourselves in other men.

- 5782. George Savile: Fool hath no dialogue within himself; the first thought carrieth him shout the r ...

- 5783. Vince Lombardi: Football is blocking and tackling. Everything else is mythology.

- 5784. Bette Howland: For a long time it seemed to me that real life was about to begin, but there was ...

- 5785. Queen Victoria: For a man to strike any women is most brutal, and I, as well as everyone else, t ...

- 5786. Earl Nightingale: For a person to build a rich and rewarding life for himself, there are certain q ...

- 5787. F. Scott Fitzgerald: For a transitory enchanted moment man must have held his breath in the presence ...

- 5788. Ludwig Wittgenstein: For a truly religious man nothing is tragic.

- 5789. Thomas Carlyle: For all right judgment of any man or things it is useful, nay, essential, to see ...

- 5790. John Wooden: For an athlete to function properly, he must be intent. There has to be a defini ...

- 5791. Robert K. Greenleaf: For anything new to emerge there must first be a dream, an imaginative view of w ...

- 5792. John Burroughs: For anything worth having one must pay the price; and the price is always work, ...

- 5793. Aristotle: For as the interposition of a rivulet, however small, will occasion the line of ...

- 5794. John Christian Bovee: For cowards the road of desertion should be left open; they will carry over to t ...

- 5795. William Blake: For everything exists and not one sigh nor smile nor tear, one hair nor particle ...

- 5796. William Blake: For everything that lives is holy, life delights in life.

- 5797. Ralph Waldo Emerson: For everything you have missed, you have gained something else; and for everythi ...

- 5798. Richard Brinsley Sheridan: For if there is anything to one's praise, it is foolish vanity to be gratified a ...

- 5799. Epictetus: For it is not death or hardship that is a fearful thing, but the fear of death a ...

- 5800. Plato: For just as poets love their own works, and fathers their own children, in the s ...

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