Nothing is more useless in developing a nation's economy than a gun, and nothing blocks the road to social development more than the financial burden of war. War is the arch enemy of national progress and the modern scourge of civilized men.
‐‐ Hussein of Jordan
Nothing is more valuable to people than health care, and by paying, they feel less like beggars and more like 'customers' who can and should demand quality care.
‐‐ Muhammad Yunus
Nothing is more witty and grotesque than ancient mythology and Christianity; that is because they are so mystical.
‐‐ Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel
Nothing is more wretched than the mind of a man conscious of guilt.
‐‐ Plautus
Nothing is my guiltiest pleasure. I love it. I love doing it. I love planning to do it, I love loafing and pottering and chilling and daydreaming.
‐‐ David Morrissey
Nothing is nearer to us than heaven. The earth is beneath our feet, and we tread upon it, but heaven is within us.
‐‐ Nikos Kazantzakis
Nothing is old, nothing is new, save the light of grace underneath which beats a human heart. The way of feeling, of understanding, of loving; the way of seeing the country, the faces that your father saw, that your mother knew. The rest is chimerical.
‐‐ Georges Rouault
Nothing is out of our realm, because it has nothing to do with color. As black people, we're not different from anyone else, other than the exterior.
‐‐ Marla Gibbs
Nothing is over and done with. Nothing. Not even your malice.
‐‐ Jack Henry Abbott
Nothing is over until we decide it is! Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor? Hell, no!
‐‐ John Belushi
Nothing is perfect. Life is messy. Relationships are complex. Outcomes are uncertain. People are irrational.
‐‐ Hugh Mackay
Nothing is permanent in this wicked world - not even our troubles.
‐‐ Charlie Chaplin
Nothing is pleasant that is not spiced with variety.
‐‐ Francis Bacon
Nothing is poetical if plain daylight is not poetical; and no monster should amaze us if the normal man does not amaze.
‐‐ Gilbert K. Chesterton
Nothing is politically right which is morally wrong.
‐‐ Daniel O'Connell
Nothing is possible without men, but nothing lasts without institutions.
‐‐ Jean Monnet
Nothing is proved, all is permitted.
‐‐ Theodore Dreiser
Nothing is quite so emotional and passionate as what goes on inside of a family. People are driven to distraction by a father or a mother or a husband. Or a child.
‐‐ Helen Mirren
Nothing is really media driven or committee driven, so you can actually just produce something.
‐‐ Bill Sienkiewicz
Nothing is really real unless it happens on television.
‐‐ Daniel J. Boorstin
Nothing is really typical of my efforts... I'm simply casting about for better ways to crystallise and capture certain strong impressions (involving the elements of time, the unknown, cause and effect, fear, scenic and architectural beauty, and other seemingly ill-assorted things) which persist in clamouring for expression.
‐‐ H. P. Lovecraft
Nothing is really work unless you would rather be doing something else.
‐‐ James M. Barrie
Nothing is sacred, right?
‐‐ Mia Kirshner
Nothing is sacred to a gamester.
‐‐ Bernard Joseph Saurin
Nothing is sadder than having worldly standards without worldly means.
‐‐ Van Wyck Brooks
Nothing is said that has not been said before.
‐‐ Terence
Nothing is secret once you tell anyone. If you want to keep it quiet - don't tell a soul.
‐‐ Richard Chamberlain
Nothing is so admirable in politics as a short memory.
‐‐ John Kenneth Galbraith
Nothing is so aggravating than calmness.
‐‐ Oscar Wilde
Nothing is so beautiful as spring - when weeds, in wheels, shoot long and lovely and lush; Thrush's eggs look little low heavens, and thrush through the echoing timber does so rinse and wring the ear, it strikes like lightning to hear him sing.
‐‐ Gerard Manley Hopkins
Nothing is so boring as having to keep up a deception.
‐‐ E. V. Lucas
Nothing is so contagious as enthusiasm.
‐‐ Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Nothing is so contagious as example; and we never do any great good or evil which does not produce its like.
‐‐ Francois de La Rochefoucauld
Nothing is so dangerous for our security as large groups of desperate people.
‐‐ Marianne Williamson
Nothing is so dear as what you're about to leave.
‐‐ Jessamyn West
Nothing is so difficult as not deceiving oneself.
‐‐ Ludwig Wittgenstein
Nothing is so difficult but that it may be found out by seeking.
‐‐ Jean Racine
Nothing is so discouraging to an actor than to have to work for long hours upon hours in brightly lighted interior sets.
‐‐ John Wayne
Nothing is so easy to fake as the inner vision.
‐‐ Robertson Davies
Nothing is so embarrassing as watching someone do something that you said couldn't be done.
‐‐ Sam Ewing
Nothing is so envied as genius, nothing so hopeless of attainment by labor alone. Though labor always accompanies the greatest genius, without the intellectual gift labor alone will do little.
‐‐ B. R. Hayden
Nothing is so fatal to religion as indifference.
‐‐ Edmund Burke
Nothing is so firmly believed as what we least know.
‐‐ Michel de Montaigne
Nothing is so galling to a people not broken in from the birth as a paternal, or, in other words, a meddling government, a government which tells them what to read, and say, and eat, and drink and wear.
‐‐ Thomas Babington Macaulay
Nothing is so good as it seems beforehand.
‐‐ George Eliot
Nothing is so good that impious and sacrilegious and wicked people cannot contort its proper benefit into evil.
‐‐ Giordano Bruno
Nothing is so great an example of bad manners as flattery. If you flatter all the company, you please none; If you flatter only one or two, you offend the rest.
‐‐ Jonathan Swift
Nothing is so hard for those who abound in riches as to conceive how others can be in want.
‐‐ Jonathan Swift
Nothing is so healing as the human touch.
‐‐ Bobby Fischer