Related Quotes
All quotes about:
daily-tasks dainty beats
A small daily task, if it be really daily, will beat the labours of a spasmodic Hercules. Anthony Trollope
daily-tasks tyrants people
It is also in the interests of the tyrant to make his subjects poor... the people are so occupied with their daily tasks that they have no time for plotting. Aristotle
daily-tasks insulting england
It is related of an Englishman that he hanged himself to avoid the daily task of dressing and undressing. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
daily-tasks needs world
Laundry, liturgy and women's work all serve to ground us in the world, and they need not grind us down. Our daily tasks, whether we perceive them as drudgery or essential, life-supporting work, do not define who we are as women or as human beings. Kathleen Norris
daily-tasks lunch dinner
I enter my studio at 9 a.m. I have lunch here, I return right away to my work and I go out to dinner at 8 p.m. My daily tasks vary very much. Oscar Niemeyer
daily-tasks mad wealth
This mad rush for wealth must cease and the labourer must be assured not only of a living wage but, also a daily task that is not mere drudgery. Mahatma Gandhi
daily-tasks way emergencies
The prizes go to those who meet emergencies successfully. And the way to meet emergencies is to do each daily task the best we can. William Feather
insulting insult easy
It is easy to smile at an insult and pretend it's funny when the person insulting you is hosing you with money. Al Alvarez
insulting sit
I think it's insulting to an audience to make them sit and watch a film and then give them a message in one sentence. Asghar Farhadi
insulting care may
If you can speak about what you care about to a person you disagree with without denigrating them or insulting them, then you may actually be heard. Amy Poehler
insulting perhaps personally sold taxpayers
Perhaps the taxpayers should also take it as personally insulting when they are being sold out. Joe Sinagra
insulting want interviews
Eddie Murphy said once in an interview that nothing is offensive if it's funny. I sort of agree with that, but if something's funny and you're the subject of it, sometimes it's more offensive. If someone's insulting you, you want them to sound like an idiot. Artie Lange
insulting democracy germany
In Germany democracy died by the headman's axe. In Britain it can be by pernicious anaemia. Aneurin Bevan
insulting may used
When you become used to never being alone, you may consider yourself Americanised Andre Maurois
insulting literature reputation
It was delightful but, of course, it was pretty insulting to my professional reputation. Anthony Holden
insulting
If a stranger is writing something completely fictitious, or insulting me on a blog or a tabloid, I don't take it personally. Dasha Zhukova
england ireland-and-the-irish fragments
Why should Ireland be treated as a geographical fragment of England - Ireland is not a geographical fragment, but a nation. Charles Stewart Parnell
england drs turns
It's almost like he has Dr. Who's Tardis because he always turns up on time. (on Teddy Sheringham) Alan Pardew
england said exciting
England in the '60s and the '70s was everything that history has said; it was phenomenally exciting, musically. Alan Rickman
england without-you stills
England still will be here without you. Alan Jay Lerner
england pace jazz
Here in England we live at a slower pace, have more time to enjoy things - like good jazz. Chris Barber
england hollywood emotion
Everything was in stark and dreadful contrast with the trivial crises and counterfeit emotions of Hollywood, and I returned to England deeply moved and emotionally worn out. C. S. Forester
england few ireland popular until
Until a few years ago, it was never as popular over there as it was here. But by this point, it has been commercialized and is a pretty big celebration in Ireland and England. Chris Sullivan
england common good-things
It was always yet the trick of our English nation, if they have a good thing, to make it too common. William Shakespeare
england safe ifs
England is safe, if true within itself. William Shakespeare