avers Quotes and Quotations
Quote Authors: avers
These are all authors with the name avers.
avers Quotes and Quotations
Below is a random selection of 25 avers quotes and sayings. Refresh to see more sayings and quotes about avers.
- 1
Canada was built on dead beavers. Margaret Atwood | top
- 2
To understand the true quality of people, you must look into their minds, and examine their pursuits and aversions. Marcus Aurelius | top
- 3
The greater the decrease in the social significance of an art form, the sharper the distinction between criticism and enjoyment by the public. The conventional is uncritically enjoyed, and the truly new is criticized with aversion. Walter Benjamin | top
- 4
We will never have real safety and security for wage earners unless we provide for safety and security for the wage payers and wage savers. William J. H. Boetcker | top
- 5
No rules exist, and examples are simply life-savers answering the appeals of rules making vain attempts to exist. Andre Breton | top
- 6
My only aversion to vice, is the price. Victor Buono | top
- 7
The degree of leverage now being reversed is staggering, and the underlying global imbalances - notably between the savers and the spenders - will require long and painful adjustment. Vince Cable | top
- 8
My true friends have always given me that supreme proof of devotion, a spontaneous aversion for the man I loved. Sidonie Gabrielle Colette | top
- 9
When the fabric of the universe becomes unknown, it is the duty of the university to produce weavers. Gordon Gee | top
- 10
Iron which is brought near a spiral of copper wire, traversed by an electrical current, becomes magnetic, and then attracts other pieces of iron, or a suitably placed steel magnet. Hermann von Helmholtz | top
- 11
You traverse the world in search of happiness, which is within the reach of every man. A contented mind confers it on all. Horace | top
- 12
The kind of people I look for to fill top management spots are the eager beavers, the mavericks. These are the guys who try to do more than they're expected to do - they always reach. Lee Iacocca | top
- 13
The marvelous richness of human experience would lose something of rewarding joy if there were no limitations to overcome. The hilltop hour would not be half so wonderful if there were no dark valleys to traverse. Helen Keller | top
- 14
I had accumulated some capital and was at an age at which I was interested in generating income. But even though I was risk averse, I was interested in growth stocks. James MacArthur | top
- 15
Lawyers are like beavers: They get in the mainstream and dam it up. John Naisbitt | top
- 16
I'm not averse to helping Wall Street when it helps Main Street. Ben Nelson | top
- 17
In fact, this network, which we may identify as the Round Table Groups, has no aversion to cooperating with the Communists, or any other groups, and frequently does so. Carroll Quigley | top
- 18
Testimony demands to be interpreted because of the dialectic of meaning and event that traverses it. Paul Ricoeur | top
- 19
Reduce the number of lawyers. They are like beavers - they get in the middle of the stream and dam it up. Donald Rumsfeld | top
- 20
I always had, deep down, a slight aversion toward the purely cerebral in music. Esa-Pekka Salonen | top
- 21
And now when we hear that Iran and Iraq plan to cooperate more closely and that a fundamentalist is coming to power in Tehran - a man about whom we cannot be sure that he is absolutely averse to terrorism - it is very worrisome. Otto Schily | top
- 22
I am very averse to bringing myself forward in print, but as my account will only appear as an appendage to a former production, and as it will be confined to such topics as have connection with my authorship alone, I can hardly accuse myself of a personal intrusion. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley | top
- 23
'Tis safest in matrimony to begin with a little aversion. Richard Brinsley Sheridan | top
- 24
I regard you with an indifference closely bordering on aversion. Robert Louis Stevenson | top
- 25
Yet, upon the whole, the space I traversed is unlikely to become the haunt of civilized man, or will only become so in isolated spots, as a chain of connection to a more fertile country; if such a country exist to the westward. Charles Sturt | top