The pursuit of happiness is a most ridiculous phrase: if you pursue happiness you'll never find it.
The sea the great unifier is man's only hope. Now as never before the old phrase has a literal meaning: we are all in the same boat.
After people have repeated a phrase a great number of times they begin to realize it has meaning and may even be true.
Government's view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves tax it. If it keeps moving regulate it. And if it stops moving subsidize it.
Plus I love comic writing. Nothing satisfies me more than finding a funny way to phrase something.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science the one that heralds new discoveries is not 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'
If love is the answer could you please rephrase the question?
A family with the wrong members in control that perhaps is as near as one can come to describing England in a phrase.
Taking it in its wider and generic application I understand faith to be the supplement of sense or to change the phrase all knowledge which comes not to us through our senses we gain by faith in others.
In my career as an actor there is a catchphrase that Scofield always says often in regards to his brother 'Have a little faith.' In my own career as an actor there were times when I was the only one who believed in myself in the face of the odds.
The one phrase you can use is that success has a thousand fathers and failure is an orphan.
A great deal has been written in recent years about the purported lack of motivation in the children of the Negro ghettos. Little in my experience supports this yet the phrase has been repeated endlessly and the blame in almost all cases is placed somewhere outside the classroom.
But human experience is usually paradoxical that means incongruous with the phrases of current talk or even current philosophy.
Our world faces a true planetary emergency. I know the phrase sounds shrill and I know it's a challenge to the moral imagination.
I've had quite a lot of luck with dreams. I've often awoken in the night with a phrase or even a whole song in my head.
The Greeks said grandly in their tragic phrase 'Let no one be called happy till his death' to which I would add 'Let no one till his death be called unhappy.'
There are plenty of problems in the world and doubtless climate change - or whatever the currently voguish phrase for it all is - certainly is one of them. But it's low on my list.