Famous Quotes
7397 Quotations with Your.
- 1821. Robert Louis Stevenson: A friend is a present you give to yourself.

- 1822. Donna Roberts: A friend is someone who knows the song in your heart, and can sing it back to yo ...

- 1823. Frank Crane: A friend is someone with whom you dare to be yourself.

- 1824. Author Unknown: A friend once wrote: Give me your faith, not your doubts.

- 1825. Quentin Crisp: A gentleman doesn't pounce he glides. If a woman sits on a piece of furniture wh ...

- 1826. Freeman Dyson: A good cause can become bad if we fight for it with means that are indiscriminat ...

- 1827. Charles Haddon Spurgeon: A good character is the best tombstone. Those who loved you, and were helped by ...

- 1828. Robert Townsend: A good manager doesn't try to eliminate conflict; he tries to keep it from wasti ...

- 1829. HSM Burns: A good manager is a man who isn't worried about his own career but rather the ca ...

- 1830. Frank Crane: A good motto is: Use friendliness but do not use your friends.

- 1831. Elizabeth Barrett Browning: A good neighbor sometimes cuts your morning up to mince-meat of the very smalles ...

- 1832. Author Unknown: A good way to forget your troubles is to help others out of theirs.

- 1833. Lisa Kirk: A gossip is one who talks to you about others; a bore is one who talks to you ab ...

- 1834. Reggie Jackson: A great manager has a knack for making ballplayers think they are better than th ...

- 1835. Author Unknown: A hard thing about business is minding your own

- 1836. Meister Eckhart: A human being has so many skins inside, covering the depths of the heart. We kno ...

- 1837. Ogden Nash: A husband is a guy who tells you when you've got on too much lipstick and helps ...

- 1838. Lord Henry P. Brougham: A lawyer is a gentlemen that rescues your estate from your enemies and then keep ...

- 1839. Joel A. Barker: A leader is a person you will follow to a place you wouldn't go by yourself.

- 1840. Sir Richard Steele: A little in drink, but at all times your faithful husband.
