Being Forty Quotes
Collection of top 19 famous quotes about Being Forty
Being Forty Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Being Forty quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Wendelin the Weird enjoyed being burned so much that she allowed herself to be caught no less than forty-seven times in various disguises.
— J.K. Rowling
She is too absorbed in the difficulties of being seventeen to want to hear the confusions of forty-four.
— Barbara Kingsolver
Forty being the "precise age where you're old enough and young enough to handle a revelation".
— Liane Moriarty
Does being forty feel fabulous and foxy? Liz asked.
— Curtis Sittenfeld
At twenty, if you are not an idealist, then you don't have a heart. And if you continue being an idealist at forty, then you don't have a brain.
— Sudha Murty
The best thing about being 40 is that you can appreciate 25-year-old men more.
— Colleen McCullough
The lovely thing about being forty is that you can appreciate twenty-five-year-old men more.
— Colleen McCullough
What I try to do for my readers is to pass on some of the things that I found out about being thirteen after doing it for forty years.
— Diane Duane
When I was thirty and perhaps forty, I did not want a wife. It was too much fun being single.
— Jacob Ruppert
Being an actor is easy, just picture someone in a room and you outside waiting for your cue to go in. Elliot Gould's been trying that for forty years.
— George Burns
it wasn't that the forty-eight-year-old doctor didn't like people; he simply liked being alone better.
— James Patterson
One of the advantages of being over forty is that one begins to learn the difference between knowing and realising.
— Gustav Holst
What was that old story about how women had a better chance of being abducted by aliens than they did getting married after forty?
— Dorothea Benton Frank
For all the talk you hear about knowledge being such a wonderful thing, instinct is worth forty of it for real unerringness.
— Mark Twain
Any man who is capable of being offended or insulted after the age of forty is either immature or a damned hypocrite." (Senator)
— Leonard Holton