parte Quotes and Quotations
Quote Authors: parte
These are all authors with the name parte.
parte Quotes and Quotations
Below is a random selection of 25 parte quotes and sayings. Refresh to see more sayings and quotes about parte.
- 1
Here the Frenchman, Spaniard, and Englishman all passed, leaving each his legend; and a brilliant and more or less feudal civilization with its aristocracy and slaves has departed with the economic system upon which it rested. Hervey Allen | top
- 2
Leo couldn't deliver Mr. Martin Scorsese his Oscar with 'The Aviator', but I will go on record to say I will do so in 'The Departed'. Anthony Anderson | top
- 3
When we parted I had written everything for the group. My leaving sort of evened things out within the group. Syd Barrett | top
- 4
The order of the world is always right - such is the judgment of God. For God has departed, but he has left his judgment behind, the way the Cheshire Cat left his grin. Jean Baudrillard | top
- 5
Of joys departed, not to return, how painful the remembrance. Robert Blair | top
- 6
Violence is the repartee of the illiterate. Alan Brien | top
- 7
I love to engage in repartee with people who are stupider than I am. Ann Coulter | top
- 8
A majority is always better than the best repartee. Benjamin Disraeli | top
- 9
Today I begin to understand what love must be, if it exists... When we are parted, we each feel the lack of the other half of ourselves. We are incomplete like a book in two volumes of which the first has been lost. That is what I imagine love to be: incompleteness in absence. Edmond de Goncourt | top
- 10
Yes it was we, are a few years back parted from our record company and took the album that we were making with them and released it independently in the United States had a number one Independent debut in the United States. Isaac Hanson | top
- 11
Our normal waking consciousness, rational consciousness as we call it, is but one special type of consciousness, whilst all about it, parted from it by the filmiest of screens, there lie potential forms of consciousness entirely different. William James | top
- 12
As the body dieth when the soul departeth, so the soul of man dieth, when it hath not the knowledge of God. John Jewel | top
- 13
I and life: The case was settled chivalrously. The opponents parted without having made up. Karl Kraus | top
- 14
Hell is nothing else but nature departed or excluded from the beam of divine light. William Law | top
- 15
Actual aristocracy cannot be abolished by any law: all the law can do is decree how it is to be imparted and who is to acquire it. Georg C. Lichtenberg | top
- 16
I have departed from this planet and I have left behind my poor earthly ones with their occupations which are as many as they are useless; at last I am living in the scintillating splendor of the stars, each of which used to seem to me as large as millions of suns. Jules Massenet | top
- 17
Buonaparte has often made his boast that our fleet would be worn out by keeping the sea and that his was kept in order and increasing by staying in port; but know he finds, I fancy, if Emperors hear the truth, that his fleet suffers more in a night than ours in one year. Horatio Nelson | top
- 18
No man can purchase his virtue too dear, for it is the only thing whose value must ever increase with the price it has cost us. Our integrity is never worth so much as when we have parted with our all to keep it. Ovid | top
- 19
For years I had my hair parted down the middle in a ponytail, tucked down around the sides... Well, I went and cut the bangs, and I've been wearing them ever since. They say it's my trademark. Bettie Page | top
- 20
Love of fame is the last thing even learned men can bear to be parted from. Tacitus | top
- 21
Silence is the unbearable repartee. Alexander Theroux | top
- 22
I will not attempt to deny the reasonableness and necessity of a party war; but in carrying on that war all principles and rules of justice should not be departed from. Robert Walpole | top
- 23
There are several such issues where I have departed radically from the Republican orthodoxy. William Weld | top
- 24
When from our better selves we have too long been parted by the hurrying world, and droop. Sick of its business, of its pleasures tired, how gracious, how benign in solitude. William Wordsworth | top
- 25
In order to the existence of such a ministry in the Church, there is requisite an authority received from God, and consequently power and knowledge imparted from God for the exercise of such ministry; and where a man possesses these, although the bis. John Wycliffe | top