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Quotes About Meeting

He went straight to Antony to ask for the money. He found him in his garden
~ Anthony Everitt
Come join me for some tea so we can discuss how your giong to die
~ Anthony Horowitz
These days, I hardly know anyone who smokes but Hawthorne was still getting through about a packet a day, which was why we usually met outside coffee shops, sitting in the street.
~ Anthony Horowitz
Great to meet you, Alex," he exclaimed. He smacked Alex on the shoulder. "Good to have you on the team!" Belinda Troy had said nothing.
~ Anthony Horowitz
I practiced drawing all the time and became very interested in it. If I was at a meeting that wasn't getting anywhere - like the one where Carl Rogers came to Caltech to discuss with us whether Caltech should develop a psychology department - I would draw the other people.
~ Richard P. Feynman
In films, I do programming I can never do in television. I have fun. Both mediums are content-led, but they are so diverse in their psychology that they cannot have a meeting point.
~ Ekta Kapoor
Some of my cousins who wanted to pursue acting were always taking pictures and meeting people. I could never think of doing all this. Doing films was the last thing on my mind.
~ Prabhas
Our best hope in meeting the many challenges that Brexit brings for us is being willing to be open-minded about the options we may choose to pursue.
~ Dominic Grieve
We shall meet again. I have believed in God. I obeyed the laws of war and was loyal to my flag.
~ Adolf Eichmann
I never met Colleen McCullough; if I had, I probably would have cried and made a fool of myself.
~ Sarah MacLean
It's just cool to have lunch with Harrison Ford.
~ Alden Ehrenreich
A committee is an animal with four back legs.
~ John le Carre
Ty Burrell could be one of the funniest people on the planet. I'd love to meet him.
~ Brooke Elliott
Who knew what fantastic secret agreement might emerge from such a meeting?
~ Fletcher Knebel
Their eyes met with a singular directness of gaze. Between them a spark passed which was not afterwards to be extinguished, though neither of them knew the moment of its kindling...
~ Frances Hodgson Burnett
Mrs. Medlock, knowing Ben had come from the gardens, hoped that he might have caught sight of his master and even by chance of his meeting with Master Colin. Did you see either of them, Weatherstaff? she asked.
~ Frances Hodgson Burnett
It had all happened in that moment, when he'd met her eyes and, like a mystic, seemed to see her past and future. Her past was haunting, marked by bottomless wounds, and the future was terrifying because it included him.
~ Francine Pascal
The meeting between ignorance and knowledge, between brutality and culture - it begins in the dignity with which we treat the dead
~ Frank Herbert
Sietch: a meeting place in time of danger.
~ Frank Herbert
The meeting between ignorance and knowledge, between brutality and culture—it begins in the dignity with which we treat our dead.
~ Frank Herbert
Their destination was Sietch Tabr—Stilgar's sietch. She turned the word over in her mind: sietch. It was a Chakobsa word, unchanged from the old hunting language out of countless centuries. Sietch: a meeting place in time of danger. The profound implications of the word and the language were just beginning to register with her after the tension of their encounter.
~ Frank Herbert
As the partners ate, Ivar crisscrossed all of these topics, frequently citing financial statistics and data from his own companies' quarterly reports. He did it entirely from memory. When he had finished, he stood quietly and met everyone's eyes one more time.
~ Frank Partnoy
The first-century churches were locatable, identifiable, visitable communities that met regularly in a particular locale.
~ Frank Viola
Mr. Hardy had already booked two seats on a one-thirty airline flight. The boys drove to the airport, left their convertible in the parking lot, and were soon boarding a sleek jet. An hour later it landed at the Philadelphia airfield. Frank and Joe caught a taxi to the modernistic plant of the Noltan Medical Company. Mr. Noltan, a burly man in a tweed suit, greeted them with a firm handshake.
~ Franklin W. Dixon