Related Quotes
argue change constant hard history marriage point somehow
The point is that the history of marriage is a history of constant change. I think it's hard to argue that this change is somehow fundamentally different from the others. Jon Davidson
argued common darwin fix galileo machines man shares
In arguing that machines think, we are in the same fix as Darwin when he argued that man shares common ancestors with monkeys, or Galileo when he argued that the Earth spins on its axis. Herbert A. Simon
argued gone
We've argued about it. ... We've gone around in circles, Alan Yamamoto
argue proud ran red sent shown
When I was a kid, I got sent off for head-butting a referee: I ran 50m to argue a decision, I was shown a red card, and I head-butted him. I'm really not proud of that. Luis Suarez
argue missing operating supporting
We're missing an operating system. You could argue that it makes a lot of sense for us to look at distributing and supporting Linux. Larry Ellison
argue bit reminisce run team type
We reminisce a little bit about the run. But usually we argue over which team could go on the same type of run this year. Ed Pinckney
argued centers convention faced gone hoped lots perform pittsburgh
What has gone on in Pittsburgh is what has gone on in lots of other cities, which are often faced with convention centers that don't perform as their proponents had hoped or promised, and so it is argued that what you need is an adjacent hotel. Heywood Sanders
argue created existence god people universe whether
I'm not going to argue with people about the existence of God. I have not the vaguest idea of whether the universe was created by an intelligence. Leonard Susskind
argue canon fitzgerald george lawrence middle people shakespeare study whether
We know what the canon is, and people can argue whether you should study F. Scott Fitzgerald or D.H. Lawrence ... I probably would put Shakespeare right in the middle - on that, George Pell and I agree. John Bell
tells
If you want to communicate with the American public, the literature tells you you've got to be talking at about a sixth-grade, seventh-grade level. Richard Carmona
tells
We usually end up crying. He tells us not to be scared. Melinda Shiraki
tells
No one ever tells us the truth, even those we love. Anna Held
tells
No one tells salesmen what they can and can't do. Barbara Corcoran
tells
Every forward is selfish, and any forward who tells you he is not selfish is a liar. Luis Suarez
tells
Nobody tells you Rwanda looks like Tuscany with its tiled roofs. Joanna Lumley
tells whatever wife
Whatever my wife tells me to do with it, Judd Gregg
tells
He tells guys, 'Go out there and play hard, but have fun,' Kenny Lofton
tells
He may. I think he does some things that tells you he can be in that running. Frank Beamer