Related Quotes
light olive spices
When you're in Portuguese-African Brazil, or Lisbon, or Mozambique, sometimes piri piri is used as a condiment. Sometimes piri piri is just spices from a jar, and sometimes it's made with garlic, olive oil, cilantro, parsley, and some light chilies. Marcus Samuelsson
light pay paying reasonable smashed
We'll pay a reasonable price, but we're not paying $2,000. It's not like we smashed light fixtures. Don MacAdam
light
You are in the Light, then the Light is in you, You are the Light. Sathya Baba
light
We wanted to make them as light and as comfortable as eyewear. Mark Spitzer
light patterns heat
I can again thy former light restore, Should I repent me: but once put out thy light, Thou cunning'st pattern of excelling nature, I know not where is that Promethean heat That can thy light relume. William Shakespeare
light moved
I am moved by the light. Maurice Maeterlinck
lights shooting studio time
I'm a portrait photographer that's used to shooting celebrities, and I usually need time and all kinds of lights and a studio to set up my shots. Platon
lighter upbeat
I think I've got to be more upbeat and lighter on the course. Mark Foster
lights maybe played realizing
Maybe I'll take a little consolation in realizing that ? even if I'd played lights out too, she was just going to one-up me all the time. Colleen Jones
shadow
Who live under the shadow of a war,/ What can I do that matters? Stephen Spender
shadow
I was really so afraid. Of my own shadow practically. Tracy Kidder
shadow
What we wanted to do was shadow them and get up on any shot. Keith Robinson
shadow
What we have now is a world-class stream, right in the shadow of Wal-Mart. Dave Chitty
shadow prestige money-and-power
Prestige is the shadow of money and power. C. Wright Mills
shadow
somethings can only be seen in the shadows Carlos Ruiz Zafon
shadow awful degrees
As the gloom and shadow thickened behind him, in that place where it had been gathering so darkly, it took, by slow degrees, - or out of it there came, by some unreal, unsubstantial process - not to be traced by any human sense, - an awful likeness of himself! Charles Dickens
shadow ordinary encounters
If you encounter a human shadow burned permanently into the concrete in Hiroshima, you realize that this is the trace of a very ordinary person now elevated into the emblematic. Time, shame, complicity, or discomfort are the only things that make us pretend History is impersonal or far removed from the power and consequences of our every lived moment. Chris Abani
shadow substance deceived
No, no, I am but shadow of myself: You are deceived, my substance is not here; William Shakespeare
world littles firsts
I didn't feel comfortable at first with pure mathematics, or as a professor of pure mathematics. I wanted to do a little bit of everything and explore the world. Benoit Mandelbrot
world helping mathematics
Fractal geometry is not just a chapter of mathematics, but one that helps Everyman to see the same world differently. Benoit Mandelbrot
world
The world's most effeminate heterosexual, Daniel Johns Art Alexakis
world-religions may belief
Idiosyncratic belief systems which are shared by only a few adherents are likely to be regarded as delusional. Belief systems which may be just as irrational but which are shared by millions are called world religions. Anthony Storr
world newspapers screens
A world without newspapers or a world where the newspapers are purely electronic and you read them on a screen is not a very appealing world. Bill Bryson
world speed
There is a lightning quickness to the speed at which candidates can build and accidentally dismantle their own campaigns. If candidates don't figure out their place in the new digital world of politics, they will be destroyed by it. Bill Burton
world good-things
It's a whole new world as far as getting a show on the air. There's good things and bad things. Bill Burr
world faces looks
We ought to look the world frankly in the face. Bertrand Russell
world adequate causes
One of the main causes of trouble in the world is dogmatic and fanatical belief in some doctrine for which there is no adequate evidence Bertrand Russell