W Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with W. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“What is fear, when you are no one
Who killed nothingness , with a dagger of emptiness
Traversed the agony, for being alive
One who crossed the country, is a no man
Death is a reward, for a renegade
The separation, the life, other syndromes
The unification is a dream, unachievable
The eyes saw them in distant, untouchable
What can't be achieved, will be asked
The "ask" for a longing in the life
How to spread the life, to walk over
For the life, i can't ask, to the death for a dream
-Mohammad Hafiz Ganie”
Source: No Book: Some Forsaken Words
“What is fear? Why are you so afraid? Even if everything is known about you and you are an open book, why fear? How can it harm you? Just false conceptions, just conditionings given by the society - that you have to hide, that you have to protect yourself, that you have to be constantly in a fighting mood, that everybody is and enemy, that everybody is against you. Nobody is against you! Even if you feel somebody is against you, he is not against you because everybody is concerned with himself, not with you”
“What is feminism? Simply the belief that women should be as free as men, however nuts, dim, deluded, badly dressed, fat, receding, lazy and smug they might be. Are you a feminist? Hahaha. Of course you are.”
“What is fetus farming? Simply put, it is the creation and development of a human fetus for the purposes of later killing it for research or for harvesting its organs.”
“What is fiction or cinema if not escape?”
“What is filmmaking but groping in the dark?”
“What is firmly rooted cannot be pulled out”
Source: Tao Te Ching
“What is first love worth, except to prepare for a second? What does second love bring? Only regret for the first.”
Source: Pike County Ballads and Other Pieces
“What is first seen as a loss is now seen as a gain. For he finds solitude, not in far off, quite places; he creates it out of himself, spreads it around him, wherever he may be, because he loves it and slowly he ripens in this tranquility. For the inner process is beginning to unfold, stillness is extraordinarily important.”
“What is flirtatiousness but an argument that life must go on and on and on?”
“What is focus and who has the right to say what focus is the legitimate focus?”
“What is food to one man may be fierce poison to others”
“What is for me socialism is exactly the opposite of a bureaucratically-managed culture.”
“What is forbidden is most desirable.”
Source: Faceless The Only Way Out
“What is forever? God, I don't know. Hope, I guess. That's a difficult question.”
“What is forgiven is usually well remembered.”
Source: Paradise: Essays on Myth, Art & Reality
“What is forgiving? Forgiving is giving up all claim on one who had hurt you and letting go of the emotional consequences of the hurt. How can we do that? It's done at the price of beating back our pride. By nature we are selfish. Forgiving, by definition, is unselfish. Being hurt by another person wounds our pride. Pride stands in the way of forgiving. We cannot forgive without God's help. It might be possible for us to forgive something inconsequential without God's help; but in significant matters, we are unlikely to accomplish anything without God's involvement in the process.”
“What is forgotten, however, is that many times the Good we create leads to Evil that will destroy us.”
“What is formed and framed through the technological grasp and circulation of the visual and discursive dimensions of war? This grasping and circulation is already an interpretive manoeuvre, a way of giving an account of whose life is a life, and whose life is effectively transformed into an instrument, a target, or a number, or is affected with only a trace remaining or none at all.”
Source: Frames of War: When is Life Grievable?
“What is found now is found then. If you find nothing now, you will simply end up with an apartment in the City of Death.”
Source: The Kabir book: forty-four of the ecstatic poems of Kabir
“What is free time? I'm a single mother. My free moments are filled with loving my little girl.”
“What is freedom? Freedom is the right to choose: the right to create for oneself the alternatives of choice. Without the possibility of choice a man is not a man but a member, an instrument, a thing.”
“What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist.”
Source: In good faith
“What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist. Without the freedom to challenge, even to satirize all orthodoxies, it ceases to exist. Language and the imagination cannot be imprisoned, or art will die, and with it, a little of what makes us human.”
Source: In good faith
“What is freedom, in the end, but that no one cares any longer to try to restrain us?”
Source: The Liars' Gospel
“What is freedom? Freedom is the right to choose: the right to create for oneself the alternatives of choice. Without the possibility of choice a man is not a man but a member, an instrument, a thing. —Archibald MacLeish”
“What is freedom? It consists in two things: to know each his own limitations and accept them - that is the same thing as to know oneself, and accept oneself as one is, without fear, or envy, or distaste; and to recognise and accept the conditions under which one lives, also without fear or envy, or distaste. When you do this, you shall be free.”
“What is freedom? There is no such thing as absolute freedom!”
“What is Freelancing?
Freelancing is a work arrangement where individuals offer their services to clients on a project basis, often remotely and without being tied to a single employer. In this model, freelancers are self-employed and take on various assignments from different clients, rather than having a traditional full-time job.
A Freelancer can provide various types of services in a wide range. Such as Article writing, Graphic design, Web development, Digital marketing, Consulting, SEO, and more. They have the flexibility to choose the projects they work on, set their own rates, and determine their work schedules.
Some Features of Freelancing are Discussed Below:
1. Flexibility: Freelancers usually work on projects of their choice and set their own working hours. Because they have that freedom, which allows them to balance work with personal life.
2. Independence: Freelancers are essentially their own bosses. They manage their work, clients, and business operations independently.
3. Diversity: Freelancers can work on different projects for different clients, gaining exposure to different industries and challenges.
4. Remote Work: Most freelancers work remotely, enabling them to collaborate with clients from around the world without the need for a physical office.
5. Project-Based: Freelancers are hired for specific projects or tasks, with defined start and end dates, rather than being employed on a long-term basis.
6. Skill-Based: Freelancers offer specialized skills that clients might not have in-house, making them valuable for tasks requiring expertise.
7. Income Variation: Freelancers' income can vary based on the number and type of projects they take on, making financial planning important.
8. Client Relationships: Building strong client relationships is crucial for repeat business and referrals.
9. Self-Promotion: Freelancers often need to market themselves to attract clients and stand out in a competitive market.
Basically, you can do freelancing with the work you want to do or the work you are good at. The most interesting thing is that in this field you are everything and your decision is final.
Please Visit Our Blogging Website to read more Articles related to Freelancing and Outsourcing, Thank You.”
“What is friendship but a mutual respect with a smattering of envy.
Emma Beers Jones”
Source: Fame & Other Disasters
“What is Friendship, Definition of Friend, True Friendship - All about the meaning of true friends, what friendship means, meaning of friendship bracelets, poems, ring”
“What is fright by night is curiosity by day.”
Source: Les Miserables Volume Two
“What is fruitful alone is true.”
Source: Goethe's color theory
“What is full of redundancy or formula is predictably boring. What is free of all structure or discipline is randomly boring. In between lies art.”
“What is fundamentally beautiful is compassion: for yourself and for those around you.”
“What is funny about us is precisely that we take ourselves too seriously.”
“What is funny is when you do a futuristic movie, you immediately get to be fashionable because you're creating something that doesn't exist.”
“What is gained by debt relief and aid can be lost if we don't get a proper trade agreement in Hong Kong.”
“What is gained by the transcendence of the object is the identifiability of the object in a plurality of acts and the identifiability of what is thought by several individuals. This identifiability is not restricted to ideal objects, which are generated according to a definite operational law and are therefore producible by everyone out of the same material of intuition which is given prior to any particular sense-experience. The identifiability obtains in precisely the same way for objects of myth and folklore, of belief and artistic fantasy. Goethe’s Faust, Apollo, and Little Red Riding Hood can be identified by several individuals and are the objects of common, universally valid statements. Indeed, exact identity of the nature of the object in question and evidential knowledge of this identity can occur *only* in the case of ideal objects. Our certainty that we all think the same number 3 in the strictest identity of its nature is much more evident than that we all think the same real object, a tree, for instance. In the case of real objects we can actually prove that it is impossible for the momentary content in which the object is represented and thought to be exactly the same in a plurality of acts and for many individuals. The only other contribution made by the fact of the consciousness of transcendence, so long overlooked in recent philosophy, to the problem of reality is this: the acts in which this consciousness is present can bring the givenness of reality, of which we shall speak later, into “objective” form, and can therefore elevate that which is given in this way as real to the status of a real “object.” But with this, the contribution of the consciousness of transcendence to the problem of reality is at an end. Although N. Hartmann made the same point with respect to Paul Linke’s otherwise shrewd and pertinent comments on his doctrine of reality, still we should emphasize that the transcendence of the object does not *exclude* the reality of the object, not even of the *same* object in the strict sense of “same.”
―from_Idealism and Realism_”
“What is gained by violence must be lost before superior violence.”
Source: The Moral and Political Writings of Mahatma Gandhi: Non-Violent Resistance and Social Transformation
“What is gained through ignorance is bound to be lost through ignorance”
“What is gardening but tidying and maintaining an outside space? And yet we don't think of it as a chore; we see it as a pleasure and something that relaxes us. Crucially, it is something that often fully absorbs us while we do it. This is the very definition of a mindful activity.”
Source: Happy Inside: How to harness the power of home for health and happiness
“What is gayer than believing in a household god?”
Source: Wedding preparations in the country: and other posthumous prose writings. With notes by Max Brod
“What is generally known as discipline in traditional schools is not activity, but immobility and silence. It is not discipline, but something that festers inside a child, arousing his rebellious feelings.”
Source: Creative Development in the Child: The Montessori Approach, Volume One
“What is generally missed, is that my writing financed research.”
“What is generally referred to as American-style films are, in fact, studio productions.”
“What is generally regarded as success - acquisition of wealth, the capture of power or social prestige - I consider the most dismal failures. I hold when it is said of a man that he has arrived, it means that he is finished - his development has stopped at that point.”
Source: Red Emma Speaks: An Emma Goldman Reader
“What is generally termed reality is, to be precise, a frothy nothing.”
“What is genius but the power of expressing a new individuality?”
Source: Elizabeth Barrett to Miss Mitford: the unpublished letters of Elizabeth Barrett Barrett to Mary Russell Mitford
“What is genius or courage without a heart?”
Source: The Beauties of Goldsmith, Or, The Complete Treasury of Genius: To which is Prefixed the Life of the Author