I Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with I. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“I loved much to the point that I lost the true meaning of hate.”
“I loved music and art, combining the two seemed like a natural match.”
“I loved music from the age of eight. Jazz and blues. But also Little Richard and Elvis Presley.”
“I loved music. What struck me most about a song wasn’t the lyrics or genre but simply the way it sounded. It’s like when you hear that right song, no matter where you are or what you are doing, the way it sounds just stirs something inside of you. Maybe it’s the melody, the instruments, or the singer’s voice, but for that short moment you forget everything else on your mind and just feel.”
Source: A Most Important Year
“I loved music, and in my ninth year at MIT, I decided to buy a hi-fi set. I figured that all I needed to do was look at the specifications. So I bought what looked like the best one, turned it on, and turned it off in five minutes, the sound was so poor.”
“I loved music, but I found myself at the point where I wanted to die. I didn't care about life.”
“I loved music. I played the piano. However I knew there was no way I could have successfully competed in that environment.”
“I loved music. Music was a big thing and so I started collecting records. I had a large collection of jazz records and that was something else I used to listen to. At night, there was a - what the heck was his name? There was a famous - Jazzbo Collins, I used to listen to at night, and some other guys.”
“I loved musicals, love them still. But also, I'm really inspired by comedy music.”
“I loved musicals. I loved being in the school play and being lucky enough to get parts in the school play. But they always took place in some other time and place.”
“I loved my 17 years with R.E.M., but I'm ready to reflect, assess and move on to a different phase of my life. The four of us will continue our close friendship, and I look forward to hearing their future efforts as the world's biggest R.E.M. fan.”
“I loved my baby dolls when I was a kid. I used to pray with them and say good night to each and every one of them because I didn't want their feelings to get hurt. I remember having that connection with my baby dolls.”
“I loved my bedroom... the vanity with the warped mirror, the squat chairs without armrests, the elaborate, oriental dressing screen. I loved curving my body into the velvet sofa, books piled at my feet, the dusty, floor-length curtains pushed back from the windows so I could see the sky. At night the purple-fringed lampshades turned the light a hue somewhere between lilac and dusky plum.”
Source: Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
“I loved my boarding school, but I didn't know what I wanted to do. I didn't have a career.”
“I loved my body and did not want it to perish; I loved my soul and did not want it to decay. I have fought to reconcile these two primordial forces.”
Source: The last temptation of Christ
“I loved my boyfriend. Our back and forth reminded me of black-and-white films I hadn't seen.”
Source: Show Them a Good Time
“I loved my brother and I understand why he thought he couldn't live the future laid before him, but I also hate him a little for leaving me like that. And also for the message he left behind - one that he himself didn't listen to. He let them brake him. And in turn, his death nearly broke me.”
Source: We Three Heroes
“I loved my career at Goldman Sachs. I believed in business principle number 1: if the client succeeds, our own success will follow. This principle formed the basis for my career and my leadership style.”
“I loved my childhood. They had the coolest toys back then. Star Wars, Transformers, laser-tag gun sets. Toy companies have really gone downhill.”
“I loved my country, and I hated him.”
Source: Byron: Selected Poetry and Prose
“I loved my dish towel. This one was two-toned, and had, on one side, stitchings of fat purple roses on a lavender background, and on the other side, fat lavender roses on a purple background. Which side to use? An optical-illusion namesake with which I could dry our dishes. It was soft and worn and smelled like no-nonsense laundry detergent.”
Source: The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake
“I loved my family so much when I was growing up, my parents, my sister. I wanted to be able to give them everything they ever dreamed of.”
“I loved my father, but I was not like him. I never needed to believe the best of people. I took them as they were: two-faced, desperate, kind - perhaps all at once. But to Pa, they were all children of god, poor troubled sheep, who only needed love and an even break. He needed the world to back up what his religion told him about people. And when it came down to a choice between reason and faith, he let go of reason.”
Source: Far North
“I loved my friend for his gentleness, his candor, his good repute, his freedom even from my own livelier manner, his calm and reasonable kindness. It was not any particular talent that attracted me to him, or i anything striking whatsoever. I should say in one word, it was his goodness.”
Source: The Autobiography ... with Reminiscences of Friends and Contemporaries
“I loved my friend He went away from me There's nothing more to say The poem ends, Soft as it began- I loved my friend.”
Source: The Collected Works of Langston Hughes: Works for children and young adults: poetry, fiction, and other writing
“I loved my husband very much, and it was heartbreaking to have him develop Alzheimer's disease, and to stand by and watch him decline in his ability to take care of himself.”
“I loved my kids. And I loved my house, and I loved a lot of things about my life in the 1950s. But there were a lot like me in that era, very overeducated housewives.”
“I loved my life, but my choices were overloading and overwhelming me. Listening to inner feelings and fulfilling some of these urges when they come along is incredibly important.”
“I loved my mother and father.”
“I loved my mother too,' I said. 'I still do. That's the thing - it never goes away, even if the person does.”
Source: Eve
“I loved my mother very much, but she was not a good cook. Most turkeys taste better the day after; my mother's tasted better the day before. In our house Thanksgiving was a time for sorrow.”
Source: Naked Beneath My Clothes: Tales of a Revealing Nature
“I loved my motherland dearly before I went to America and England.
After my return, every particle of dust of this land seems sacred to me.”
“I loved my own Grandparents with all my heart. I learned important lessons from them about how to treat people, how to cook and how to work.....they showered us kids with love and left the parenting to Momma and Daddy. That's the beauty of being a grandparent - the hard work belongs to someone else. I guess I never really understood the depth of their love for me until I became a grandmother myself... it is unlike any other relationship.”
“I loved my parents... but that can never change the fact that my father's violence ruined my childhood.”
“I loved my role on Who's the Boss? There is always some of me in every character that I play.”
“I loved my time on All My Children. That show was a family to me. I am so sad that daytime is slowly fading away. I owe so much to daytime. I learned so much about my craft and I made so many wonderful friends there and I am so sad that it is all going away.”
“I loved myself and since I loved me, I loved him because I realized he was good for me. A type of self worth, a type of narcissistic love.”
“I loved myself so hard I brought her back.”
Source: Dyscalculia: A Love Story of Epic Miscalculation
“I loved nearly all my teachers; but it was not till I went home to live at Oxford, in 1867, that I awoke intellectually to a hundred interests and influences that begin much earlier nowadays to affect any clever child.”
“I loved New Jersey. I thought it was the greatest place in the world because on Halloween kids could start trick or treating right after school. Isn't that great?”
“I loved New York — every inch of it. It was a little bit scary at that time, but still, the excitement was so strong — visually and intellectually. It was like a monster.”
“I loved New York, but I never quite felt like New York was my home either.”
“I loved New York. I made enough money and studied acting with Kenneth McMillan, which was my first formal training.”
“I loved nuns when I was growing up. I thought they were beautiful. For several years I wanted to be a nun. I saw them as really pure, disciplined, above average people. They had these serene faces. Nuns are sexy.”
“I loved old black and white movies, especially the Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers musicals. I loved everything about them - the songs, the music, the romance and the spectacle. They were real class and I knew that I wanted to be in that world.”
“I loved old movies as a kid, so I always watched old movies.”
“I loved Old School. I thought Old School was very different than a lot of the comedies that had come out. And that character I liked. I tried to ground him very much in reality and play him very much [as] finding things important to him that are somewhat ridiculous.”
“I loved Omar Vizquel. He tells some really long jokes, and he has his own way of telling them, but he can make every joke very funny. He would always come up with jokes on the loudspeaker on the bus.”
“I Loved One, Not Many ; Many Loved It, Not One”
“I loved Ophelia. Forty thousand brothers could not, with all their quantity of love, make up my sum.”