Famous Quotes
1561 Quotations with Vent.
- 861. Kenneth Hildebrand: Someone receives a promotion, gets an important assignment, makes a major discov ...

- 862. Kenneth Hildebrand: Someone receives a promotion, gets an important assignment, makes a major discov ...

- 863. Phyllis Mcginley: Sometimes I have a notion that what might improve the situation is to have women ...

- 864. Jean Arp: Soon silence will have passed into legend. Man has turned his back on silence. D ...

- 865. Karl Kraus: Stupidity gets up early; that is why events are accustomed to happening in the m ...

- 866. Malcolm Muggeridge: Television was not invented to make human beings vacuous, but is an emanation of ...

- 867. Anatole France: That man is prudent who neither hopes nor fears anything from the uncertain even ...

- 868. James Freeman Clarke: The art of life consists in taking each event which befalls us with a contented ...

- 869. Ralph Waldo Emerson: The arts and inventions of each period are only its costume, and do not invigora ...

- 870. Edward Gibbon: The author himself is the best judge of his own performance; none has so deeply ...

- 871. W. Edwards Deming: The average American worker has fifty interruptions a day, of which seventy perc ...

- 872. Aristotle: The beginning of reform is not so much to equalize property as to train the nobl ...

- 873. Author Unknown: The brave venture anything.

- 874. Author Unknown: The brave venture anything.

- 875. Marcus T. Cicero: The causes of events are ever more interesting than the events themselves.

- 876. Patrick Donovan: The City's reluctance to take a stand on an issue like the British Gas pay row m ...

- 877. Patrick Donovan: The City's reluctance to take a stand on an issue like the British Gas pay row m ...

- 878. Charles Caleb Colton: The consequences of things are not always proportionate to the apparent magnitud ...

- 879. J. Z. Young: The continuous invention of new ways of observing is man's special secret of liv ...

- 880. Victor Hugo: The convent, which belongs to the West as it does to the East, to antiquity as i ...
