Famous Quotes
19256 Quotations with Thin.
- 10501. John Farrar: The first thing an unpublished author should remember is that no one asked him t ...

- 10502. John Farrar: The first thing an unpublished author should remember is that no one asked him t ...

- 10503. Robert Frost: The first thing I do in the morning is to make my bed and while I am making up m ...

- 10504. Peggy Fleming: The first thing is to love your sport. Never do it to please someone else. It ha ...

- 10505. Peggy Fleming: The first thing is to love your sport. Never do it to please someone else. It ha ...

- 10506. Fred A. Allen: The first thing that strikes a visitor to Paris is a taxi.

- 10507. Fred A. Allen: The first thing that strikes a visitor to Paris is a taxi.

- 10508. Author Unknown: The first thing the secretary types is the boss.

- 10509. Silas Weir Mitchell: The first thing to be done by a biographer in estimating character is to examine ...

- 10510. Pablo Casals: The first thing to do in life is to do with purpose what one purposes to do.

- 10511. William James: The first thing to learn in intercourse with others is non-interference with the ...

- 10512. Margaret Oliphant: The first thing which I can record concerning myself is, that I was born. These ...

- 10513. The Holy Bible: The first wrote, wine is the strongest. The second wrote, the king is strongest. ...

- 10514. Jorge Luis Borges: The flattery of posterity is not worth much more than contemporary flattery, whi ...

- 10515. Arthur Schopenhauer: The fly ought to be used as the symbol of impertinence and audacity, for whilst ...

- 10516. Redd Foxx: The food here is so tasteless you could eat a meal of it and belch and it wouldn ...

- 10517. Marie De France: The fool shouts loudly, thinking to impress the world.

- 10518. William Shakespeare: The fool thinks himself to be wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool.

- 10519. Sir Richard Steele: The fool within himself is the object of pity, until he is flattered.

- 10520. Author Unknown: The foolish think that nothing is well done, except that which they do themselve ...
