T Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with T. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“There is great significance and importance in all our day-to-day actions in both words and deeds.”
“There is great skill in knowing how to conceal one's skill.”
“There is great sorrow in my heart today.
Then tell us why you are sad.
How will telling help?
My son, one who is sad can find relief by talking about his sorrow to a friend.”
Source: Simhasana Dvatrimsika: Thirty-Two Tales of the Throne of Vikramaditya
“There is great stuff waiting for you on the other side of fear.”
“There is great treasure there behind our skull and this is true about all of us. This little treasure has great, great powers, and I would say we only have learnt a very, very small part of what it can do.”
“There is great truth in Alphonse Karr's remark that modern men are ugly because they do not wear their beards.”
“There is great unanimity among the dissolute.
[Lat., Magna inter molles concordia.]”
“There is great value in being able to say "yes" when people ask if there is anything they can do. By letting people pick herbs or slice bread instead of bringing a salad, you make your kitchen a universe in which you can give completely and ask for help. The more environments with that atmospheric makeup we can find or create, the better.”
Source: An Everlasting Meal: Cooking with Economy and Grace
“There is great value in disaster. All our mistakes are burned up. Thank God we can start a new.”
“There is great variation in brain power all the way from Einstien on one hand to Sarah Palin on the other.”
“There is great victory when you go on your knees and ask God to intervene.”
Source: A Manual for Victory
“There is great weight in the modern times of being monarch, the scrutiny and access is much more than in times gone by.”
“There is great wisdom in a business having a system in place for adapting its underlying assumptions and pivoting so that it can continue to survive and thrive in the new reality by reclaiming relevance and providing value to newly defined markets.”
Source: Business Paradigm Shifting: A Quick 6-Step Guide to Remaining Relevant as Markets Change
“There is great wisdom, there's great strength and there's great beauty in all of our religion, and those should be marshaled for good.”
“There is great worth in holding universal truths and timelessly beautiful words in your heart, which will stay there forever, infusing your thoughts and speech.”
“There is greater clarity in the still waters of sadness, something not found in the babbling brooks of more sought after emotions.”
“There is greatness in doing something you hate for the sake of someone you love.”
“There is greatness in everyone already. The job of the leader is not to put greatness in anyone. The job of the leader is to make people discover and exploit the greatness already existing in them!”
Source: Leaders' Watchwords
“There is greatness in everyone.”
“There is greatness in the fear of God, contentment in faith of God, and honour in humility.”
“There is growing awareness of the beauty of country ... a sincere desire to keep some of it for all time. People are beginning to value highly the fact that a river runs unimpeded for a distance... They are beginning to obtain deep satisfaction from the fact that a herd of elk may be observed in back country, on ancestral ranges, where the Indians once hunted them. They are beginning to seek the healing relaxation that is possible in wild country. In short, they want it.”
“There is growing consensus that new parents need help--information, advice, practical assistance--and that infants and toddlers need stimulation as well as care and nurture.”
Source: Starting Right: How America Neglects Its Youngest Children and what We Can Do about it
“There is guidance for each of us, and by lowly listening we shall hear the right word.”
Source: Essays and Lectures
“There is happiness here that others have found, though it must be floating on the dreams they’ve drowned. I shall live my life with buoyancy. My hopes and dreams wait ahead of me.”
Source: THIS SIDE OF A WILDERNESS: A Novel
“There is happiness in duty, although it may not seem so.”
“There is happiness in the love of labor, there is misery in the love of gain.”
Source: The Sabbath
“There is happiness when you are with your best friend no matter whether your friend belongs to another sect, or region; your souls are from one place.”
Source: Cat and Dog in Magical Garden
“There is hardly a better way to avoid discussion than by releasing an argument from the control of the present and by saying that only the future will reveal its merits.”
Source: The Origins of Totalitarianism
“There is hardly a case in which the dispute was not caused by a woman.”
“There is hardly a congressman prepared to go home until he has at least one speech printed and sent to his constituents, and he won't let anybody interrupt his harangue until he has made all his useful suggestions about the 24 states of the Union, and especially the district he represents.”
“There is hardly a facet of life that is now free of some sort of federal action.”
Source: Speaking up
“There is hardly a man on earth who will take advice unless he is certain that it is positively bad.”
“There is hardly a mistake which in the course of our lives we have committed, but some proverb, had we known and attended to its lesson, might have saved us from it.”
Source: On the lessons in Proverbs: being the substance of lectures delivered to young men's societies at Portsmouth and elsewhere; from the Second London edition, rev. and enlarged
“There is hardly a more common error than that of taking the man who has one talent, for a genius.”
Source: Essays and aphorisms
“There is hardly a more gracious gift that we can offer somebody than to accept them fully, to love them almost despite themselves.”
Source: The Complete Elizabeth Gilbert: Eat, Pray, Love; Committed; The Last American Man; Stern Men & Pilgrims
“There is hardly a more heart-thrilling pleasure enjoyed by mortals, than that which parents feel when seeing their child first being able to 'catch knowledge of objects.”
“There is hardly a pioneer's hut which does not contain a few odd volumes of Shakespeare. I remember reading the feudal drama of Henry V for the first time in a log cabin.”
Source: Democracy in America
“There is hardly a political question in the United States which does not sooner or later turn into a judicial one.”
Source: Democracy in America
“There is hardly an absurdity of the past that cannot be found flourishing somewhere in the present.”
Source: Our Oriental Heritage: The Story of Civilization
“There is hardly an activity that a person can think about that does not intrinsically involve energy, most of which is currently provided by fossil fuels.”
“There is hardly an American male of my generation who has not at one time or another tried to master the victory cry of the great ape as it issued from the androgynous chest of Johnny Weissmuller, to the accompaniment of thousands of arms and legs snapping during attempts to swing from tree to tree in the backyards of the Republic.”
Source: Reflections Upon a Sinking Ship. (1. Ed.)
“There is hardly any activity, any enterprise, which is started out with such tremendous hopes and expectations, and yet which fails so regularly, as love.”
Source: THE ART OF LOVING
“There is hardly any contact more depressing to a young ardent creature than that of a mind in which years full of knowledge seem to have issued in a blank absence of interest or sympathy.”
Source: Middlemarch: (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)
“There is hardly any deviancy, no matter how reprehensible in one context, which is not extolled as a virtue in another. There are no natural crimes, only legal ones.”
“There is hardly any element that contains the same vigor as our emotions do. Embark on a journey of spirituality and self-growth by embracing your emotions.”
Source: Equilibrium
“There is hardly any grief that an hour's reading will not dissipate.”
“There is hardly any man so strict as not to vary a little from truth when he is to make an excuse.”
“There is hardly any mental misery worse than that of having our own serious phrases, our own rooted beliefs, caricatured by a charlatan or a hireling.”
Source: Wise, Witty, and Tender Sayings in Prose and Verse: Selected from the Works of George Eliot
“There is hardly any money interest in art, and music will be there when money is gone.”
“There is hardly any one so insignificant that he does not seem imposing to some one at some time.”
Source: Human Nature and the Social Order