Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I was a horrible limo driver: I ran out of gas with passengers in the back and I used to get lost on a regular basis.
I ran track for my school. I played football, but I didn't play for my high school; I played for a little league team.
I thought boxes were the best toy. When my parents got a new car, I ran to my mother and said, 'Did it come in a box?'
If Black Stache laughed, you laughed. If he snarled, you snarled. If he breathed in your direction, you ran for cover.
My mom had gotten a Super 8 camera to make home movies with, and my brother and me got our hands on it and ran with it.
When I was about 10 I ran away to see my father. He couldn't have cared less. He just took me back as soon as he could.
My mom made me a Shawn Michaels costume when I was a kid. I wore it every day and ran around the house dancing like him.
The thing I ran up against was everybody wanted a song so fast. It took me two years to finish 'Touch Me in the Morning.'
If I ran as a Dem, I know I could beat Hillary Clinton. And if it was me vs. Trump, I would crush him. No doubt about it.
Where I'm from, Bastrop, Louisiana, you played football, basketball, and baseball; you ran track - and that was about it.
Seeing friends become successful, you go, 'I can do that, too.' I ran with it fresh out of college. MMA was the next step.
My father ran a CB radio business. I grew up in a cluttered space that was filled with radios and antennas. It felt alien.
The first presidential election I really paid attention to was in 1988 when George H. W. Bush ran against Michael Dukakis.
I ran away from small-town Canada to London; I ran away from my family because I didn't think I could be the person I was.
I was the son of a publican and a master builder. He ran the Empire Hotel in North Hobart. His name was Max, too. Big Max.
My vehemence was against the federal courts. I never said a word against black people in my heart since I ran for governor.
The debt they ran up in the first year of the Obama administration is bigger than the last four years of the Bush combined.
I ran for Congress because I want to make sure others have the same chance at the dream that I had for generations to come.
I ran for president in order to be able to try to change Washington D.C. from the inside. Our federal government is broken.
I didn't get nervous when I ran, but I get nervous watching other people now. I root for anybody with a USA on their chest.
Victoria Woodcock ran Vote Leave - she was a truly awesome project manager and without her Cameron would certainly have won.
As for Madonna, I always used to laugh at her running. And now I run! I get why she always ran. I wish I'd run when she did.
In the 1940s, the petroleum business was an American game, and it was enormously to our advantage that the world ran on oil.
When I was in jail, I was a lot of people's favorite person. I practically ran the jail. I had more freedom than the police.
'Gimme a Break' ran for six years and gave me the kind of money and freedom that I'd dreamed would make me happy. It didn't.
I thought Obama ran the best campaign I have ever known - disciplined, well organised, very, very good. I was very impressed.
We need a new leader in Congress who will represent the issues that Donald Trump ran on because they were the winning issues.
I think it's encouraging that President Trump is talking about strengthening our national defense, something he ran on again.
I ran the high school newspaper and was in student government. I played sports my whole life but was never picked as captain.
I played sports year around: basketball, soccer, softball and I ran track year around, from the time I was, like, six, seven.
Bernie Madoff... was regulated up and down and every which way, and it didn't do any good - he ran away with everyone's money.
When I was a kid, I was at a bowling alley and I ran into a soda machine. I still have the scar on my right eyebrow obviously.
My freshman year, I ran for student class president and lost. The next year, I ran for student class vice president, and I won.
In 2004, I ran for Congress and lost. In 2006, I ran again and won - defeating Richard Pombo, a seven-term Republican incumbent.
My sister ran away for four years; she was living on the streets. I didn't know where she was, and then I was getting in trouble.
Cartoons ran into trouble when they became too much like real life images. Cartoons had become poor imitations of the real thing.
Life magazine ran a page featuring me and three other girls that was clearly the precursor of Sports Illustrated swimsuit issues.
When I was the NIH director, I often expressed envy of institute directors: they had the money and ran the scientific programmes.
My father is a doctor and my mother ran the local pharmacy. Growing up, I saw firsthand the difference they made to our community.
When I was a baby feminist, leading feminist thinkers were insisting that if women ran the world, there would be no sadism or war.
When my trust fund ran out, I panicked. I have a lot of admiration for the kids who come to the big city with nothing and make it.
My slogan when I ran was that there is no such thing as government money, there is only taxpayer's money, and that cut pretty deep.
When I ran for governor, was I ambitious? Yes. Anyone, male or female, who goes through the trials of a campaign must be ambitious.
Hollywood was a detour, although my mother was an aristocrat from Tokyo who ran away to join the theatre, so acting is in my genes.
From day one, I've always tried to be an honest man. I ran for Congress to make a difference and not to just be another politician.
My first car was a Buick Skyhawk from, like, '78, I think. I ran that thing into the gutter. It was shaped like an egg; it was cool.
I did a lot of acting when I was a child. I was very shy - the kind of kid who ran into a corner and cried on parents' visiting day.
It's not just that I'm a woman of color running for office. It's the way that I ran. It's the way that my identity formed my methods.
I grew up on an apple orchard with a lot of surrounding wooded area, and I ran everywhere. I was outside all the time climbing trees.
During the 2008 campaign, Hillary Clinton ran a blunt television ad asking whether Barack Obama could handle a foreign policy crisis.