Famous Quotes
499 Quotations with Thousand.
- 241. Victor Hugo: Separated lovers cheat absence by a thousand fancies which have their own realit ...

- 242. Victor Hugo: Separated lovers cheat absence by a thousand fancies which have their own realit ...

- 243. Willis R. Whitney: Some men have thousands of reasons why they cannot do what they want to, when al ...

- 244. Washington Irving: Some minds seem almost to create themselves, springing up under every disadvanta ...

- 245. Oliver Goldsmith: Take a dollar from a thousand and it will be a thousand no more.

- 246. Dorothy Uhnak: Take everything easy and quit dreaming and brooding and you will be well guarded ...

- 247. Niels Bohr: Technology has advanced more in the last thirty years than in the previous two t ...

- 248. Napoleon Bonaparte: Ten persons who speak make more noise than ten thousand who are silent.

- 249. Euripides: Ten thousand men possess ten thousand hopes.

- 250. Henry David Thoreau: That devilish Iron Horse, whose ear-rending neigh is heard throughout the town, ...

- 251. Akhenaton: The ambitious will always be first in the crowd; he presseth forward, he looketh ...

- 252. William Faulkner: The artist is of no importance. Only what he creates is important, since there i ...

- 253. Theodore Roosevelt: The boy who is going to make a great man must not make up his mind merely to ove ...

- 254. Vaclav Havel: The exercise of power is determined by thousands of interactions between the wor ...

- 255. Herbert Clark Hoover: The fabric of American life is woven around our tens of thousands of voluntary a ...

- 256. Samuel Johnson: The habit of looking on the best side of every event is worth more than a thousa ...

- 257. William Boetcker: The individual activity of one man with backbone will do more than a thousand me ...

- 258. Jeannette Rankin: The individual woman is required a thousand times a day to choose either to acce ...

- 259. Jeannette Rankin: The individual woman is required a thousand times a day to choose either to acce ...

- 260. Margaret Mead: The institution of marriage in all societies is a pattern within which the strai ...
