Dubious Quotes
Collection of top 54 famous quotes about Dubious
Dubious Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Dubious quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
I'm very suspicious of the idea of a "final theory" in natural science, and the thought of a complete system of ethical rules seems even more dubious.
— Philip Kitcher
Beauty, therefore, for the modern and postmodern artist has become a highly dubious metaphor for a discredited belief system.
— John Walford
All obvious moves look dubious in analysis after the game.
— Viktor Korchnoi
Tara...seemed to digest gossip as voraciously as an owl, regurgitating it in the form of little pellets of dubious information.
— Erin Saldin
In Britain I'm sometimes regarded as a suspiciously Europeanized writer, who has this rather dubious French influence.
— Julian Barnes
A lot of people still think caring about clothes is a dubious, unserious, frivolous, girlie thing.
— Jerry Saltz
Never again should Ghanaians have to resort to dubious means to get to, or live in, foreign lands, simply to make a living.
— John Agyekum Kufuor
A witch so bold would not flinch, no matter how harsh her punishment might be, though his wish was for her to feel every strike.
— Arla Dahl
We are the Triumvirate. We do not take orders from Kerch street rats with dubious haircuts.
— Leigh Bardugo
If I see something dubious, say on a blog or a Web site, and I don't see it anywhere else, I'll just go right to the source and check it out.
— Al Michaels
And he felt dubious and discontented suddenly, and wondered whether he was really and truly successful as a human being.
— E. M. Forster
A blush is no language; only a dubious flag - signal which may mean either of two contradictories
— George Eliot
In a world where only a minor portion of the land is really well suited to agriculture, man is using much of the best land with dubious efficiency.
— Frances Moore Lappe
Yes, I am the last man to have walked on the moon, and that's a very dubious and disappointing honor. It's been far too long.
— Gene Cernan
Computer models of the climate ... [are] a very dubious business if you don't have good inputs.
— Freeman Dyson
One cannot enter a State legislature or a prison for felons without becoming, in some measure, a dubious character.
— H.L. Mencken
The invention of film has given our generation the dubious advantage of watching our acting heroes deteriorate before our eyes.
— Robert Brustein
She said, What you don't know won't hurt you. A dubious maxim: sometimes what you don't know an hurt you very much.
— Margaret Atwood
Sometimes are feats aren't so fabulous, they're just dubious - but either way, they're fun to talk about.
— Tucker Elliot
An excellent job with a dubious undertaking, which is like saying it would be great if it wasn't awful.
— Ada Louise Huxtable
It is of the dubious inevitable side of human nature - like gold teeth and tinned salmon and bastard lacy valentines
— Mary MacLane
Even the false accusations of a person of dubious morality can taint the reputation of an upright servant.
— Hock G. Tjoa
The Bible is full of dubious scientific impossibilities, from Jonah living inside a whale, to the sun standing still in the sky for Joshua.
— Lawrence M. Krauss
You don't know won't hurt you. A dubious maxim: sometimes what you don't know can hurt you very much. (The Blind Assassin, 137).
— Margaret Atwood
I'm not a pacifist by any measure, but I'm also fully aware that the reasons I might go to war could be very dubious.
— Sherman Alexie
I adore [photography's] uneasy mix of fact and fiction - its dubious claim to truth - its status as history.
— Eleanor Antin
Flower lifted a brow, dubious. 'You have to pay for a place to be dead in?'
Moon shrugged. 'Sometimes, in cities. It's a groundling thing. — Martha Wells
Moon shrugged. 'Sometimes, in cities. It's a groundling thing. — Martha Wells
To me, nothing in the art world is neutral. The idea of 'disinterest' strikes me as boring, dishonest, dubious, and uninteresting.
— Jerry Saltz
As always when people are overtaxed creatively, they come up with the most dubious suggestions.
— Timur Vermes
Man on the dubious waves of error toss'd.
— William Cowper
In the face of evil, detachment is a dubious virtue.
— Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
I held the dubious honor of being the one person who could make cool, collected Nick lose his temper.
— Jennifer Echols
The fiction writer is the ombudsman who argues our humble, dubious case in the halls of eternal record.
— John Updike
Heroes only come in three kinds:dead, damaged or dubious.
— Gregory David Roberts
Startups often have to do dubious things.
— Paul Graham
I still come closest to success with drawing. When I use color the results are dubious, for these painfully gained experiences bear less fruit.
— Paul Klee
The dubious privilege of a freelance writer is he's given the freedom to starve anywhere.
— S.J Perelman
How far the existence of the Academy has influenced French literature, either for good or for evil, is an extremely dubious question.
— Lytton Strachey
It's what he needs, and whether he ever admits it to us or not, it's what he loves" - Theoden (From Commanded:House of Theoden)
— Nicholas Bella
What you don't know won't hurt you. A dubious maxim: sometimes what you don't know can hurt you very much.
— Margaret Atwood
I believe that religious faith schools are highly dubious.
— Bjorn Ulvaeus
The way to prevent war is to bend every energy toward preventing it, not to proceed by the dubious indirection of preparing for it.
— Max Lerner
Her little butterfly soul fluttered incessantly between memory and dubious expectation.
— George Eliot
Slow as your own dubious grace.
— Joe Meno
You've had an extremely weak euro on the foreign exchange markets, you've had a very dubious policy being followed.
— John Major
The life we all live is amateurish and accidental; it begins in accident and proceeds by trial and error toward dubious ends.
— Wallace Stegner
Despite the dubious statistics ... democracy is a thing of value for which we should be fighting.
— Rory Stewart
If we were to live, we had to be free of anger. [It is] the dubious luxury of normal men and women.
— Stephen King