Waldorf Quotes
Collection of top 21 famous quotes about Waldorf
Waldorf Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Waldorf quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
This best time to Nap is ... after the one before.
— Mawson Bear
What would they do if I said I hurt so much I feel like I want to die?
- Jeremy Richards — Julius Lester
- Jeremy Richards — Julius Lester
Oh my god, she couldn't help thinking. I have hairy legs and I'm going to die alone.
— Cecily Von Ziegesar
A third force, developing itself more slowly, becomes even more potent than the rest: the power of gold.
— John Lothrop Motley
You have to ask a lot of questions and listen to people, but eventually, you have to go by your own instincts.
— Kirk Kerkorian
One of the things I strive for is realism. I need to be as real as possible in the dilemmas my characters face.
— Tamora Pierce
There's not really a choice about, am I going to pursue a typical career? Because I'm not the typical standard, so that's not even an option.
— America Ferrera
people are taking a bottle of wine to a dinner party or for a gift, they'll often settle on Chardonnay.
— James Waldorf
The Reggio Emilia philosophy for the education of young children and the Waldorf schools.
— Daniel H. Pink
Indeed, the direction of the future is only there in order to elude us.
— Georges Bataille
I do love the Waldorf-Astoria, though. You know, I hear that from the doorstep you can see all the way to the Russian tea room.
— Barack Obama
Though I love the luxury of the Waldorf Towers, room service there doesn't do soul food.
— Sammy Davis Jr.
Respectable people... What bastards!
— Emile Zola
The street to obscurity is paved with athletes who can perform great feats before friendly crowds.
— George Allen, Sr.
Your ability to think is unlimited, and so the things you can think into existence are unlimited.
— Rhonda Byrne
The Waldorf looked like one of the dead and empty spaces which collect about the exit of a man who has lost a million in an hour.
— Norman Mailer
Do what thou wilt, the most sublimely austere ethical precept ever uttered, despite its apparent license.
— Aleister Crowley
Obviously, all of us have been influenced by those around us.
— Tom G. Palmer