Man, anytime the ball goes through the basket. It doesn't matter if it's a jumper or a drive. Any time the ball goes through the basket, and it's going through consistently, it's demoralizing for any opponent.
‐‐ Dwyane Wade
Man appears for a little while to laugh and weep, to work and play, and then to go to make room for those who shall follow him in the never-ending cycle.
‐‐ Aiden Wilson Tozer
Man appoints, and God disappoints.
‐‐ Miguel de Cervantes
Man approaches the unattainable truth through a succession of errors.
‐‐ Aldous Huxley
Man arrives as a novice at each age of his life.
‐‐ Nicolas Chamfort
Man, as a physical being, is like other bodies governed by invariable laws.
‐‐ Charles de Secondat
Man as a pure animal does not exist.
‐‐ Francis Parker Yockey
Man as an individual is a genius. But men in the mass form the headless monster, a great, brutish idiot that goes where prodded.
‐‐ Charlie Chaplin
Man, as long as he lives, is immortal. One minute before his death he shall be immortal. But one minute later, God wins.
‐‐ Elie Wiesel
Man, as we know him, is a poor creature; he is halfway between an ape and a god and he is travelling in the right direction.
‐‐ Dean Inge
Man associates ideas not according to logic or verifiable exactitude, but according to his pleasure and interests. It is for this reason that most truths are nothing but prejudices.
‐‐ Remy de Gourmont
Man becomes great exactly in the degree in which he works for the welfare of his fellow-men.
‐‐ Mahatma Gandhi
Man becomes his most creative during war.
‐‐ Clint Eastwood
Man becomes man only by his intelligence, but he is man only by his heart.
‐‐ Henri Frederic Amiel
Man becomes weak or ill by accident as a consequence of the lack of resources. Even the most severally ill patients must be treated with the aim of restoring their health.
‐‐ Michael Servetus
Man, being reasonable, must get drunk; the best of life is but intoxication.
‐‐ Lord Byron
Man blindly works the will of fate.
‐‐ Christoph Martin Wieland
Man, born of woman, has found it a hard thing to forgive her for giving him birth. The patriarchal protest against the ancient matriarch has borne strange fruit through the years.
‐‐ Lillian Smith
Man can acquire accomplishments or he can become an animal, whichever he wants. God makes the animals, man makes himself.
‐‐ Alfred North Whitehead
Man can and does rationalize his sins. He finds reasons for all his weakness, invents excuses that first calm and then deaden his conscience. He blames God, society, education, and environment for his wrong doing.
‐‐ Mother Angelica
Man can and must prevent the tragedy of famine in the future instead of merely trying with pious regret to salvage the human wreckage of the famine, as he has so often done in the past.
‐‐ Norman Borlaug
Man can be understood only by ascending from physics, chemistry, biology, and geology. In other words, he is first of all a cosmic problem.
‐‐ Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
Man can believe the impossible, but man can never believe the improbable.
‐‐ Oscar Wilde
Man can certainly flee from God... but he cannot escape him. He can certainly hate God and be hateful to God, but he cannot change into its opposite the eternal love of God which triumphs even in his hate.
‐‐ Karl Barth
Man can climb to the highest summits, but he cannot dwell there long.
‐‐ George Bernard Shaw
Man can hardly even recognize the devils of his own creation.
‐‐ Albert Schweitzer
Man can know his world without falling back on revelation; he can live his life without feeling his utter dependence on supernatural powers.
‐‐ Christopher Dawson
Man can learn nothing except by going from the known to the unknown.
‐‐ Claude Bernard
Man can never be a woman's equal in the spirit of selfless service with which nature has endowed her.
‐‐ Mahatma Gandhi
Man can never expect to start from scratch; he must start from ready-made things, like even his own mother and father.
‐‐ Marcel Duchamp
Man can now fly in the air like a bird, swim under the ocean like a fish, he can burrow into the ground like a mole. Now if only he could walk the earth like a man, this would be paradise.
‐‐ Tommy Douglas
Man cannot aspire if he looked down; if he rise, he must look up.
‐‐ Samuel Smiles
Man cannot be free if he does not know that he is subject to necessity, because his freedom is always won in his never wholly successful attempts to liberate himself from necessity.
‐‐ Hannah Arendt
Man cannot be uplifted; he must be seduced into virtue.
‐‐ Don Marquis
Man cannot degrade woman without himself falling into degradation; he cannot elevate her without at the same time elevating himself.
‐‐ Alexander Walker
Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the shore.
‐‐ Andre Gide
Man cannot influence in this respect the atomic forces of Nature.
‐‐ Frederick Soddy
Man cannot live by bread alone; he must have peanut butter.
‐‐ James A. Garfield
Man cannot live by incompetence alone.
‐‐ Charlotte Whitton
Man cannot live without joy; therefore when he is deprived of true spiritual joys it is necessary that he become addicted to carnal pleasures.
‐‐ Thomas Aquinas
Man cannot produce a single work without the assistance of the slow, assiduous, corrosive worm of thought.
‐‐ Eugenio Montale
Man cannot remake himself without suffering, for he is both the marble and the sculptor.
‐‐ Alexis Carrel
Man ceased to be an ape, vanquished the ape, on the day the first book was written.
‐‐ Arthur Helps
Man, coaching is a hard job, and it requires a lot of time... I hear stories from coaches who tell me that players call them in the middle of the night not knowing where they parked their car.
‐‐ Joe Montana
Man could not stay there forever. He was bound to spread to new regions, partly because of his innate migratory tendency and partly because of Nature's stern urgency.
‐‐ Ellsworth Huntington
Man, Dick Dale shreds. He's welcomed to anybody's bar mitzvah.
‐‐ John Zorn
Man dies of cold, not of darkness.
‐‐ Miguel de Unamuno
Man differs more from Man, than Man from Beast.
‐‐ John Wilmot
Man does find in Nature deliverance from himself, oblivion of his past, with peace and purity!
‐‐ George A. Smith