One believes that if nothing happens, one disappears. That is not true.
‐‐ Isabelle Adjani
One belongs to New York instantly. One belongs to it as much in five minutes as in five years.
‐‐ Thomas Wolfe
One big difference between our situation in Myanmar and other situations around the world is that we're not just trying to achieve peace with one group but 11 groups - so it is incredibly complicated as well.
‐‐ Thein Sein
One big, glaring difference I can think of between Iraq and Vietnam is the news coverage. During the Vietnam War era, you had TV coverage of the war saturating the airwaves every night, and that coverage wasn't put through a military filter at all.
‐‐ Mark Boal
One big question that's come up is: Has autism increased on the mild side of things? I don't think so - they've always been here. Some of this is increased detection.
‐‐ Temple Grandin
One billion people in 175 countries will mark Earth Day. That puts tea parties in perspective, doesn't it?
‐‐ Greg Dworkin
One bit of advice someone gave me - which I haven't yet tried - is that if you go to an area where you might pick up a tummy bug, you should seek out the local probiotic yogurt. Eating it will introduce you to the local gut flora, apparently.
‐‐ Anthony Head
One bites into the brass mouthpiece of his wooden cudgel, and the other blows his cheeks out on a French horn. Do you call that Art?
‐‐ Franz Schubert
One blob of red in the wrong place and the audience isn't looking at the hero, they're looking at a patch of curtain (or something similar) and your whole effect is lost.
‐‐ Terence Fisher
One book at a time... though I'm usually doing the research for others while I'm writing, but that sort of research is fairly desultory and I like to stick to the book being written - and writing a book concentrates the mind so the research is more productive.
‐‐ Bernard Cornwell
One brave deed makes no hero.
‐‐ John Greenleaf Whittier
One Buddha is not enough; we need to have many Buddhas.
‐‐ Nhat Hanh
One bully changing their behavior for the better can have a profound effect on many, many lives.
‐‐ Hunter King
One by one, all of my college buddies had taken these nothing-special entry-level jobs, pushing papers for $18,000 or $21,000 a year (and hating the work besides), and I'd turn up my nose and tell them I wasn't about to get out of bed for anything less than $50,000. That was my line, my attitude.
‐‐ Bill Rancic
One cabbie chastened me by saying that the fashion industry was doing harm to young people, who are trying to live up to an unrealistic ideal. It prompted me to make body image and diversity key issues on 'The Business of Fashion.'
‐‐ Imran Amed
One can acquire everything in solitude except character.
‐‐ Stendhal
One can advise comfortably from a safe port.
‐‐ Soren Kierkegaard
One can always come up with funny lists and jokes. You know what? I take it back. Not everyone can always come up with funny lists and some jokes. I'm very lucky to have a gift where I can do that pretty ably.
‐‐ John Hodgman
One can always debate questions back and forth.
‐‐ Robert Bourassa
One can ascend to a higher development only by bringing rhythm and repetition into one's life. Rhythm holds sway in all nature.
‐‐ Rudolf Steiner
One can be a brother only in something. Where there is no tie that binds men, men are not united but merely lined up.
‐‐ Antoine de Saint-Exupery
One can be a great poet and be politically stupid.
‐‐ Umberto Eco
One can be a vegan and eating a health-promoting, high-nutrient diet, but one can also eat a small amount of animal products while following a Nutritarian diet and still live a long, healthy life.
‐‐ Joel Fuhrman
One can be absolutely truthful and sincere even though admittedly the most outrageous liar. Fiction and invention are of the very fabric of life.
‐‐ Henry Miller
One can be emptied out and be filled up.
‐‐ Isabelle Adjani
One can be instructed in society, one is inspired only in solitude.
‐‐ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
One can be more than once in love - that's the most important thing.
‐‐ Luise Rainer
One can be the master of what one does, but never of what one feels.
‐‐ Gustave Flaubert
One can be very happy without demanding that others agree with them.
‐‐ Ira Gershwin
One can become enthusiastic over anything. For a time I was delighted with bomb throwing. It gave me a tremendous pleasure to bomb those fellows from above.
‐‐ Manfred von Richthofen
One can best observe a movement of the time - its dangers as well as its advantages - by scrutinising it in its strongest, most pronounced form.
‐‐ Ellen Key
One can criticize the Israeli government, but it is not fair to judge the people of Israel.
‐‐ Antonio Munoz Molina
One can decide that the principal role of knowledge is as an indispensable element in the functioning of society, and act in accordance with that decision, only if one has already decided that society is a giant machine.
‐‐ Jean-Francois Lyotard
One can do a film and not work for six months, but on TV, you have to produce good content every week. It involves a lot of hard work, as one has to fight for ratings every week. But I have always got love from the audiences, be it during 'The Great Laughter Challenge' or 'Comedy Circus.'
‐‐ Kapil Sharma
One can drink too much, but one never drinks enough.
‐‐ Gotthold Ephraim Lessing
One can easily classify all works of fiction either as descendants of the Iliad or of the Odyssey.
‐‐ Raymond Queneau
One can easily tell that the creator of the paintings in the Sistine Chapel was above all a sculptor.
‐‐ Edvard Munch
One can envisage taking cells from a patient with sickle-cell anaemia or an inherited blood disorder and using the Cas9 system to fix the underlying genetic cause of the disease by putting those cells back into the patient and allowing them to make copies of themselves to support the patient's blood.
‐‐ Jennifer Doudna
One can fall into the 'soft bigotry of low expectations.'
‐‐ Gerald Chertavian
One can find a squalid America as easily as a scenic America; a bitter, hopeless America as easily as the confident America of polyethylene wrapping, new cars, and camping trips in the summer.
‐‐ Robert Kennedy
One can find so many pains when the rain is falling.
‐‐ John Steinbeck
One can find women who have never had one love affair, but it is rare indeed to find any who have had only one.
‐‐ Francois de La Rochefoucauld
One can go to war alone, but you can't build peace alone.
‐‐ Jacques Chirac
One can hardly be Indian and not know that almost every accent, which hand you eat your food with, has some deeper symbolic truth, reality.
‐‐ Anish Kapoor
One can have many regrets in life, but they are temporary. There are lessons to learn from every mistake.
‐‐ Jeev Milkha Singh
One can imagine nonviolent or minimally violent ways to reduce or eliminate hatred, but there's no mollifying evil.
‐‐ Timothy Noah
One can imagine that the ultimate mathematician is one who can see analogies between analogies.
‐‐ Stefan Banach
One can, in principle, outline sort of a set of neural circuits that are critically involved and even identify disorders that affect different components of that neural circuit and see what happens if you knock out, for example, inability to recognize faces, how it affects your response to portraiture.
‐‐ Eric Kandel
One can know a man from his laugh, and if you like a man's laugh before you know anything of him, you may confidently say that he is a good man.
‐‐ Fyodor Dostoevsky