Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
More Brazilian women earn Ph.D.s every year than do men.
Women are more skilled than men at making gossip entertaining.
Basically I'm trying to make men more sensitive and women stronger.
Women are wiser than men because they know less and understand more.
Women are obviously much more discriminated against than men in many ways.
If men knew all that women think, they would be twenty times more audacious.
I think that women are much more collaborative; men are much more competitive.
Bachelors know more about women than married men; if they didn't they'd be married too.
Women are one of the Almighty's enigmas to prove to men that He knows more than they do.
They are more than men at the outset of their battles; at the end they are less than the women.
The Catholic men are more upset about women not being able to be priests than are Catholic women.
Women are often expected to be more amiable or more pleasing or more submissive than men generally.
I'm more androgynous, because men are supposed to be more spatial, women more literal - I'm a tomboy.
Men are much more egotistical. But that means women can accept criticism and improve easier than men can.
Especially in this industry, women challenge men much more now because we're saying, 'We can do it, too.'
Even more than the Pill, what has liberated women is that they no longer need to depend on men economically.
There's no evidence whatsoever that men are more rational than women. Both sexes seem to be equally irrational.
Because women get more labor rights than men, meaning they get maternity leave, the employer prefers to hire men.
The women are stepping up their degree of difficulty more than the men. A lot of us do the same dives as the men now.
One thing is for sure: that women are far more compassionate, empathetic, sensitive, and emotional in comparison to men.
The history of men's opposition to women's emancipation is more interesting perhaps than the story of that emancipation itself.
Women are really emotional creatures, and men are kind of closed in terms of emotions. I think women are just a lot more out there.
I think women let themselves be burdened by failures much more than men do. They agonize - and I do it a lot, too - and rethink them.
There is no development strategy more beneficial to society as a whole - women and men alike - than the one which involves women as central players.
I had noticed men were much more confident in their clothes. So I sought through trouser suits, trench coats, tuxedos, and pea coats to give women the same confidence.
During most of my playing career, the performance gap between men and women was slowly narrowing. Federations began providing more coaching and competitions for girls and women.
The young men of India need us to do more for them. And we need to do it for men in their own right, and we need to do it even more urgently if we really want women to be empowered too.
Women are far and away the bigger consumers of fiction than men, but men are still far and away the more reviewed, the more critically esteemed, the more respected. That can get frustrating.
Girls are infinitely more complicated than boys and women more than men. And there's no doubt about that. We just don't like to think about it. Certainly the men don't like to think about it.
Almost without exception, the talented women I have known have believed they had less ability than they actually had. And almost without exception, the talented men I have known believed they had more.
One of the first studies in the field of gender and language, by Don H. Zimmerman and Candace West in 1975, found that in casual conversations between women and men, women were interrupted far more often.
No country in Europe has a larger proportion of men and women of immigrant descent, mainly from the African continent and mainly Muslim: an estimated six to seven million of them, or more than 10% of the population.
Male critics and men in the publishing industry want from their women writers what they want from their wives. I'm interested in presenting characters that are more challenging, threatening, complicated and unpredictable.
When you combine the men and women deployed from our military installations with activated reservists and members of the National Guard, Georgia is contributing more personnel to the theatre than any other State in our Union.
Usually superheroes with all their powers and action-driven narratives are supposed to appeal to boys and men more than women; and as an extension of that, it is a given that the creators of these characters are primarily men.
Anorexia and bulimia seem to be getting much more common in boys, men, and women of all ages and socioeconomic backgrounds; they are also becoming more common in racial groups previously thought to be impervious to the problem.
Hmm, can I be obvious and say there is probably a double standard for male vs. female directors? Sadly, I think that's actually the case. And it probably stems from the fact that there are proportionately so many fewer women directors than men ones that each project is perhaps more closely scrutinized for its content.