Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I'm prone to hyperbole.
I live in a constant state of hyperbole.
Hyperbole is something I'd better avoid.
All that social media hyperbole is just so fake.
I think writers are prone to hyperbole sometimes.
I'm a biographer; I can live with a little hyperbole.
Hyperbole was to Lyndon Johnson what oxygen is to life.
Of course on air I use occasional hyperbole to tell a story.
New York, thy name is irreverence and hyperbole. And grandeur.
Hyperbole expands in societies where articulateness atrophies.
The speaking in a perpetual hyperbole is comely in nothing but love.
Hyperbole is not easily dealt with. Usually, it collapses under its own weight.
The Americans are just more enthusiastic and more likely to engage in hyperbole.
The thing that shocks people... is that I mean what I say. I don't use hyperbole.
I don't think it's exaggeration or hyperbole to say that Pedro Zamora changed the world.
Is the president purposefully using propaganda and hyperbole to garner the American public for support?
The crew on 'Three Bilboards,' by the way, is one of the best I've ever worked with. And that's not hyperbole.
I'm part Latin, so everything in the Latin culture is - there's a lot of hyperbole, and there's a lot of melodrama.
Chefs are fond of hyperbole, so they can certainly talk that way. But on the whole, I think they probably have a more open mind than most people.
Hyperbole has been part of elections since the days of John Adams, and there's nobody better than Joe Biden to give us a little hyperbole, as we all know.
We need to replace hyperbole with a reasonable, informed discussion about how to reinvent the federal budget with more transparency and better accountability.
The president we have today is a typical Washington politician that's prone to hyperbole and decisiveness and false outrage. And I think it's very sad - very sad to watch.
Some scholars attribute the decline in nicknaming to the evolutionary process that turned folk heroes into entrepreneurs. The truth is: George Herman Ruth, the namely-est guy ever, exhausted our supply of hyperbole.
There has always been something less than wholesome about New Labour. But Blair for a long time had an easy ride. There was the whopping majority. There was the relief that the Tories were finally gone. There was the grand hyperbole.
I am in the representational business, a portraitist. I have tried to walk an amused line amid hyperbole, documentary detail, cruel characterisation, occasional affection, some good punchlines and anthropological social insight. It's been a good living.
Blair's support for the Americans should not be seen as an aberration; on the contrary, it is closely linked to the main contours of New Labour policy. This has been a government that has majored on hyperbole, but in fact, from the outset it was hugely timid and cravenly orthodox.
What has happened over the years is that scientists have now developed AIDS therapeutic capabilities, as well as prevention, and we've linked prevention and treatment in a way that if you fast-forward 30 years form '88 to now, we can say without hyperbole that we have the tools, if implemented the way they could be implemented, to theoretically, essentially end the epidemic as we know it now.