E Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with E. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“Every sad thing, every loss or hurt really a challenge to love that much more, really just another of beauty's many strongholds.”
Source: Heart, You Bully, You Punk
“Every Sailor has the potential to lead," said Mullen, "I don't care if it's a seaman recruit or someone higher ranking than myself. Where there's a will, there's a way.”
“Every sailor knows that you can't sail a ship that isn't moving forward, strong leaders understand that to change direction, you first have to create forward progress.”
“Every Saint belongs to the court of the Queen of All Saints.”
“Every saint has a bee in his halo.”
“Every Saint has a past.
Every Sinner, has a future.”
“Every saint has a past. Every sinner has a future."
Oscar Wilde”
“Every saint has a past, and every sinner has a future.”
Source: The Prose of Oscar Wilde
“Every salad you serve is a picture you have painted, a sculpture you have modeled, a drama you have created.”
Source: The art of salad making
“Every sale has five basic obstacles: no need, no money, no hurry, no desire, no trust.”
“Every sales funnel has two purposes - you purpose (to generate money) prospect's purpose (gain confidence and clarity).”
“Every sane adult is insecure about at least one thing on or about them.”
“Every sane and sensible and quiet thing we do is absolutely ignored by the press.”
“Every sane man recognises that unlimited liberty is anarchy, or rather is nonentity. The civic idea of liberty is to give the citizen a province of liberty; a limitation within which a citizen is a king.”
“Every sane person has to find every day some manner of accommodating the impossible, some way of covering up for the failures of the rational world. This might actually be a reasonable definition of sanity.”
“Every sane person is an actor, at least usually. Some sane people just happen to also act professionally.”
“Every sane toddler is an aspiring comedian.”
“Every sapiens is atom bomb,
Every sapiens is a power plant.
Reckless mind is mayhem machine,
Hateless mind is lightland.”
Source: Amor Apocalypse: Canım Sana İhtiyacım
“Every satisfaction he attains lays the seeds of some new desire, so that there is no end to the wishes of each individual will.”
Source: Studies in Pessimism: Top of Schopenhauer
“Every Saturday, heat or cold, rain or shine, Milly would see Avery running up their road, her long blond ponytail swishing in time with her legs, just as the sun was making gemstones out of the fields and the hills and the bales of hay scattered across the landscape. Twiss would still be snoring away upstairs. Years of sleep remedies had failed to subdue her; she still slept like a wild animal and woke like one, too.
On warm mornings, Milly would take her cup of tea out to the porch to watch Avery run by. Though she'd never been a runner herself- she didn't like the sensation of breathlessness, or the hard thunk of her heart- she'd loved to watch Twiss run. And Avery was an even better runner than Twiss had been, and certainly more graceful. She'd run first on the Spring Green high school team and then on the university team and now was training to run the marathon in the Olympic trials.
In an interview, when a reporter from the 'Gazette' asked her why she ran, Avery said, "Why does anybody do anything?" which had made Milly like Avery even more.
Each Saturday morning, after she passed the driveway, Avery would pick up speed in order to crest the upcoming hills. Sometimes she ran with a yellow music player and matching headphones, but most of the time, she ran without them.
"Something comes in and something goes out," Avery had added in the interview, as if she'd been playing at being coy but couldn't really play when it came to running. "I'd keep running forever if my legs would let me."
"Tell me about the routes you run in Spring Green," the reporter had said.
"My favorite is my Saturday route," Avery said. "There's this little purple meadow I pass on my way up into the hills. When I was little, my grandpa used to say it was enchanted. He said if you walked through it, you'd never be the same person again."
"Where did he hear the story?" the reporter asked.
"I guess he used to know the people who lived in that house," Avery said.
"The bird sisters?" the reporter said.
"All I know is, when I pass that meadow, suddenly I can run faster," Avery said.
"Are you superstitious?"
"I visualize the meadow during all of my races, if that's what you mean."
"Have you ever walked through it?"
"I believe in it too much," Avery said.
"Can you be more specific?" the reporter asked.
"No," Avery said.”
Source: The Bird Sisters
“Every Saturday I read sentences in SPIEGEL that lack clarity.”
“Every Saturday morning and Thursday afternoon, Miss Radcliffe would lead them on a brisk walk across country, sometimes for hours at a time, through muddy fields and flowing streams, over hills and into woods. Sometimes they bicycled farther afield, to Uffington to see the White Horse or Barbury to climb the Iron Age hill fort or even on occasion as far as the Avebury stone circle. They became quite expert at spotting the round hollows Miss Radcliffe referred to as "dew ponds": they were made by prehistoric people, she said, in order to ensure that they always had sufficient water to drink. According to Miss Radcliffe, there were signs of ancient communities everywhere, if one only knew where to look.
Even the woods behind the school were filled with secrets from the past: Miss Radcliffe had shown them beyond the clearing to a small hill she called the "dragon mound." "There is every possibility that this was an Anglo-Saxon burial site," she'd said, going on to explain that it was so named because the Anglo-Saxons believed that dragons watched over their treasure. "Of course, the Celts would have disagreed. They would have called this a fairy mound and said beneath it lay the entrance to fairyland.”
Source: The Clockmaker's Daughter
“Every Saturday morning, first thing before breakfast, his parents held conferences with their children requiring them to answer two questions put to each of them: 1. What have you learned that is true (and how do you know)? 2. What problem do you have?”
Source: God Help the Child
“Every Saturday we work in the yard, pick up the dog doo, hope that it's hard.”
“Every savage can dance.”
Source: Pride and Prejudice (Fourth Edition) (Norton Critical Editions)
“Every saved person this side of heaven owes the gospel to every lost person this side of hell.”
Source: Radical: Taking Back Your Faith from the American Dream
“Every scar a scripture, every joy a sermon.”
Source: Sonnets From The Mountaintop
“Every scar has a life of its own and a space in my heart.”
“Every scar has a story, but only the strong turn theirs into a masterpiece.”
“Every scar in my face is worth it.”
“Every scarecrow has a secret ambition to terrorize.”
“Every scene has two people who want two different things, so there's conflict in every scene. You've got to duke it out, and you've got to get the other person to change his or her mind and do it your way.”
“Every scene is a lesson. Every shot is a school. Let the learning continue.”
“Every scene is a love scene. The actor should ask the question: 'Where is the love?'”
Source: Audition: Everything an Actor Needs to Know to Get the Part
“Every scene should be able to answer three questions: "Who wants what from whom? What happens if they don't get it? Why now?"”
“Every scene you will ever act begins in the middle, and it is up to you, the actor, to provide what comes before.”
Source: Audition: Everything an Actor Needs to Know to Get the Part
“Every scene, even the commonest, is wonderful, if only one can detach oneself, casting off all memory of use and custom and behold it, as it were, for the first time.”
Source: The Old Wives' Tale
“Every scene, even the commonest, is wonderful, if only one can detach oneself, casting off all memory of use and custom, and behold it (as it were) for the first time; in its right, authentic colors; without making comparisons. Cherish and burnish this faculty of seeing crudely, simply, artlessly, ignorantly; of seeing like a baby or a lunatic, who lives each moment by itself and tarnishes by the present no remembrance of the past.”
Source: Delenda est * BOD : staff use only
“Every scent is the sun's scent.”
“Every scholar, I presume, is not, necessarily, a man of sense.”
Source: Delphi Complete Works of Samuel Richardson (Illustrated)
“Every school boy and school girl who has arrived at the age of reflection ought to know something about the history of the art of printing.”
“Every school should be a hub of creativity.”
“Every school should have well-rehearsed emergency response protocols covering a variety of possible scenarios, from fire to armed intruders. Schools should have good lines of communications with local emergency response officials and practice those relationships in drills and special exercises.”
“Every schoolboy hath that famous testament of Grunnius Corocotta Porcellus at his fingers end.”
“Every schoolchild knows that Columbus set out across the sea to prove that the world was round. But the belief in a spherical earth had a long and illustrious pedigree, as Columbus himself was well aware. . . . "The second reason that inspired the Admiral [Columbus] to launch his enterprise and helped justify his giving the name 'Indies' to the lands which he discovered was the authority of many learned men who said that one could sail westward from the western end of Africa and Spain to the eastern end of India, and that no great sea lay between."”
“Every science advances only so far as articulation permits.”
“Every science begins as philosophy and ends as art; it arises in hypothesis and flows into achievement.”
Source: Story of Philosophy
“Every science consists in the coordination of facts; if the different observations were entirely isolated, there would be no science.”
Source: The Philosophy of Mathematics
“Every science has for its basis a system of principles as fixed and unalterable as those by which the universe is regulated and governed. Man cannot make principles; he can only discover them.”
“Every science in a certain degree starts from faith, and, on the contrary, faith, which does not lead to science, is mistaken faith or superstition, but real, genuine faith it is not.”
Source: Lectures on Calvinism