597 Quotations with Whose.
- 361. Aeschylus: The man whose authority is recent is always stern.

- 362. Emile Durkheim: The man whose whole activity is diverted to inner meditation becomes insensible ...

- 363. George Bernard Shaw: The man with a toothache thinks everyone happy whose teeth are sound. The povert ...

- 364. Theodore Roosevelt: The men and women who have the right ideals... are those who have the courage to ...

- 365. John Jay Chapman: The men and woman who make the best boon companions seem to have given up hope o ...

- 366. Rene Magritte: The mind loves the unknown. It loves images whose meaning is unknown, since the ...

- 367. Rene Magritte: The mind loves the unknown. It loves images whose meaning is unknown, since the ...

- 368. Marian Anderson: The minute a person whose word means a great deal to others dare to take the ope ...

- 369. Francois-Marie Arouet de Voltaire: The most beautiful of all emblems is that of God, whom Timaeus of Locris describ ...

- 370. Denis Diderot: The most dangerous madmen are those created by religion, and people whose aim is ...

- 371. Alexander Graham Bell: The most successful men in the end are those whose success is the result of stea ...

- 372. E. M. Cioran: The obsession with suicide is characteristic of the man who can neither live nor ...

- 373. Adrienne Rich: The ocean, whose tides respond, like women's menses, to the pull of the moon, th ...

- 374. Niccolo Machiavelli: The one who adapts his policy to the times prospers, and likewise the one whose ...

- 375. Sadaharu Oh: The opponents and I are really one. My strength and skills only half of the equa ...

- 376. Raymond Chandler: The overall picture, as the boys say, is of a degraded community whose idealism ...

- 377. William Hazlitt: The person whose doors I enter with most pleasure, and quit with most regret, ne ...

- 378. Francois-Marie Arouet de Voltaire: The Pope is an idol whose hands are tied and whose feet are kissed.

- 379. Friedrich Nietzsche: The press, the machine, the railway, the telegraph are premises whose thousand-y ...

- 380. Mark Twain: The public is the only critic whose opinion is worth anything at all.

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