Slightly Off Quotes
Collection of top 68 famous quotes about Slightly Off
Slightly Off Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Slightly Off quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
My plant is probably dead."
Camryn looks slightly surprised. "You have a plant?"
I smile. "Yeah, her name's Georgia. — J.A. Redmerski
Camryn looks slightly surprised. "You have a plant?"
I smile. "Yeah, her name's Georgia. — J.A. Redmerski
For a human audience, seeing things that are slightly more otherworldly and beyond human power is always really fun and exciting to watch.
— Evangeline Lilly
It is never wise to try to appear to be more clever than you are. It is sometimes wise to appear slightly less so.
— William Whitelaw
dozed off with my consciousness slightly ajar.
— Ross Macdonald
My taste in the films I've taken as an actor is similar to what I'd do a director or writer: all quite odd, challenging stuff, slightly off-the-wall.
— Daniel Radcliffe
Well, when one door closes, another slightly more inconvenient, out-of-the-way one opens. Let's be off, shall we?
— Tarun Shanker
The trick is to state what we know in a recognizable fashion but in a way that is slightly off, in a way that arrests us.
— Douglas Wilson
I keep lip gloss everywhere. It always makes me feel like I am slightly put together.
— Angela Kinsey
The truth will set you free, but it's only slightly less scary than hell and a whole lot harder to get there.
— Jon Foreman
I think the fashion industry was slightly put off by people they didn't know. They were presented with things like 20-gatefold color brochures.
— Natalie Massenet
I think managers have realized that most software people are slightly brain damaged, that they're off on their own planets.
— Eugene Jarvis
Everybody that loves Nancy loves it in a slightly condescending way. Nancy is comics reduced to their most elemental level.
— Bill Griffith
The door now hung open slightly, but Charlie didn't disturb it. It hadn't opened for her; it had only given way to time.
— Scott Cawthon
The sea was indistinguishable from the sky, except that the sea was slightly creased as if a cloth had wrinkles in it.
— Virginia Woolf
When I was 20, my mother died and I went off the rails a little bit. I kinda had my slightly dark period.
— James McCartney
'The Kumars' ... played on five continents, and even when I came up with the idea, I was slightly surprised that no one else had.
— Sanjeev Bhaskar
This girl wasn't like wildfire - she was wildfire . Deadly and uncontrollable. And slightly out of her wits.
— Sarah J. Maas
Ramen is a dish that's very high in calories and sodium. One way to make it slightly healthier is to leave the soup and just eat the noodles.
— Masaharu Morimoto
We creatives are allowed to be slightly sinister
— T.S. Easton
Becoming a 'Sir' is slightly uncomfortable at first, although it is a considerable honor. It is amazing how quickly you become accustomed to it.
— Edmund Hillary
She discovered that the most comfortable position in society was slightly off to the side...
— Soledad Puertolas
It's real hard to come off as even slightly superior when you're living a Tom and Jerry episode.
— Paul Neilan
Always slightly off balance. It was a new sensation for him.
— M.L. Stedman
Even so, everything was ever so slightly off, as if little by little the tracing paper had slipped irretrievably from the lines of summers past.
— Haruki Murakami
My whole world started to tilt. I could feel it, sliding ever so slightly off center.
— Leslie Deaton
That is how you get to be a writer, incidentally: you feel somehow marginal, somehow slightly off-balance all the time.
— Kurt Vonnegut
The whole imposing edifice of modern medicine is like the celebrated tower of Pisa - slightly off balance.
— Prince Charles
I'm sort of ... coming off a bad relationship"
"When did it end?"
"Slightly before it started. — Rainbow Rowell
"When did it end?"
"Slightly before it started. — Rainbow Rowell
All audiences should be slightly off balance.
— Richard Thompson
It is only very slightly later, when my client's head is sliced off, that I realise I have made an error. My career is finished.
— Stanley Donwood
The most dangerous of all falsehoods is a slightly distorted truth.
— Georg Christoph Lichtenberg
Raids are slightly constipating.
— Elizabeth Bowen
The universe is mad, slightly mad.
— Allen Ginsberg
To be slightly evil is to embrace life.
— Venkatesh G. Rao
When you see the most dramatic shift is when you transition from an abstract idea to a slightly more material conversation,' Jony said.
— Leander Kahney
We have another chance to navigate, perhaps in a slightly different way than we did yesterday. We cannot go back. But we can learn.
— Jeffrey R. Anderson
It was somehow slightly frightening, like the gambolling of tiger cubs which will soon grow up into man-eaters.
— George Orwell
With novels, you're sitting at a desk, alone, going slightly crazy, for anywhere from six months to a year with zero feedback.
— Duane Swierczynski
Someone who lives always with a plane schedule in the drawer lives on a slightly different calendar.
— Joan Didion
But you can't always tell - with somebody's mother, I mean. Mothers are all slightly insane.
— J.D. Salinger
There was something very slightly odd about him, but it was difficult to say what it was.
— Douglas Adams
Wilson shook his head. His eyes narrowed and his mouth widened slightly with the ghost of a superior 'Hm!'.
— F Scott Fitzgerald
I smiled into his lips, and he continued to kiss me. "Your smile is my favorite flavor," he said, pulling away slightly.
— Cambria Hebert
I'm always slightly embarrassed to meet other actresses of my vintage. We have so little in common. They're all so dedicated. I find - so desperate.
— Paulette Goddard
The queen straightened her back and tilted her head back ever so slightly, giving power to her husband's troops through her own regality.
— Samantha Wilcoxson
The earth itself is slightly resistant to routine.
— Rebecca West
A slightly uncommon condition of the some-long-word. Nothing at all serious, but it just needs putting right. A simple treatment.
— Agatha Christie