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Dictionary of Quotations

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Terms 1 to 10 of 1133    next »
E. B. Browning. . Knowledge by suffering entereth, / And life is perfected by death.
E. B. Browning. . Let us be content in work / To do the thing we can, and not presume / To fret because it's little.
E. B. Browning. . Whoever may / Discern true ends will grow
E. Everett. . Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
E. Everett. . There is no sanctuary of virtue like home.
E. H. Vessel. . The profit which comes late is better than none at all. - Den Profit som kom seent, er bedre end aldeles
E. Law. Hamilton. . We crave a world unreal as the shell-heard
E. Law. Magoon. . The master-spirit who can rule the storm is
E. Motto. Arndt. . The sun of freedom cannot set so long as smiths hammer iron. - Die Freiheit kann nicht untergehn, / So lange Schmiede Eisen hämmern
E. P. Hood. . Memory is the golden thread linking all the mental gifts and excellencies together.
 
Old English 'word lottery' pick

Percipient : a. Having the faculty of perception; perceiving; as, a percipient being.; n. One who, or that which, is percipient.

 
Based on the Dictionary of Quotations From Ancient and Modern, English and Foreign Sources by Rev. James Woods, published originally in 1893 by Frederick Warne & Co
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