logo

Quotes About Title

In Downing Street they called me 'Boss'. Civil servants would always call me 'Prime Minister'.
~ Tony Blair
I'm not technically royal.
~ David Linley
Technically, my fight with Korobov should have been for the full world title, not the interim.
~ Chris Eubank Jr.
I am become a name.
~ Robert Galbraith
She was fourteen and he was thirty-two, and this was the first and only meeting of these two remarkable monarchs. Both would eventually be accorded the title "the Great." And between them, for decades, they would dominate the history of central and eastern Europe.
~ Robert K. Massie
A student incquired at his college bookstore about a book whose author's name he could not remember, but whose queer title was, to the best of his recollection, "A World Full of Lobsters.
~ Robert L. Heilbroner
Posicionar o público não é algo novo. Shakespeare não chamou sua peça de Hamlet, chamou-a de A Tragédia de Hamlet, Príncipe da Dinamarca. Ele deu a comédias títulos como Muito Barulho Por Nada e A Comédia dos Erros, de modo que, a cada tarde no Teatro Globe, o público elisabetano estava psicologicamente preparado para chorar ou rir.
~ Robert McKee
Because leadership is a lot less about having a formal title, a large office and money in the bank. And a lot more about committing to mastery over all you do—and in who you are. It's about resisting the tyranny of the ordinary, refusing to allow negativity to hijack your sense of awe and preventing any form of slavery to mediocrity from infesting your life.
~ Robin S. Sharma
you don't need to have the biggest title to do the best job.
~ Robin Sharma
And call me Conrad!
~ Roger Zelazny
In addition to his better-known title of Father of His Country, Washington is also revered in certain circles as the Father of the American Mule.
~ Ron Chernow
Books by Lee Child Title Page Copyright Dedication Introduction
~ Lee Child
I look at what's going on in our society and what's pissing me off at the moment and I just get my basic gut reaction to that and that gut reaction usually becomes the title of the book.
~ Larry Winget
In sports, you simply aren't considered a real champion until you have defended your title successfully. Winning it once can be a fluke; winning it twice proves you are the best.
~ Althea Gibson
You know, I think I had a great career; there's not much I think I'd do different other than get a title shot much earlier. I didn't get one till 49 or 50 fights into my career.
~ Marvin Hagler
A whole population of strangers inhabited and shaped that little body, lived in that mind and controlled its wishes, dictated its thoughts...The name was an abstraction, a title arbitrarily given, like France or England, to a collection, never long the same, of many individuals who were born, lived, and died within him, as the inhabitants of a country appear and disappear, but keep alive in their passage the identity of the nation to which they belong.
~ Aldous Huxley
Alain de Botton has written a book called How Proust Can Change Your Life, a title that I suspect was devised with at least some tongue in cheek but that speaks, nonetheless, to a very real possibility of personal transformation. The title of this book is in a way lighthearted homage to de Botton's remarkable book.
~ Alexander McCall Smith
I am a Count, Not a Saint.
~ Alexandre Dumas
I am a survivor, but I also am, and always will be, a victim. I can't speak for others who share this dual identity, but I can say for myself that, while I wish to be the proud person who exclusively occupies the title of survivor, I still claim the territory of the shivering, cowering victim.
~ Donna Freitas
Table of Contents Title Page Copyright Page Dedication Acknowledgements One - Richard Two - Miss Lavinia Would Like to Have a Word with You Three - Make No Misteak!
~ Dorothea Benton Frank
The simple fact that there's a title for him-husband-means he has a role in the family, whatever his ethnicity.
~ Jewelle Gomez
He gave it to the use of the Industrious and Rational, (and Labour was to be his Title to it)." People
~ Jill Lepore
In Middle English, a frankeleyn is a free man, an owner of land but not of title: neither a serf nor a peasant but not a nobleman, either. There
~ Jill Lepore
Emma is the eponymous heroine, which means having the name that is used as the title or name of something else.)
~ Joan Elizabeth Klingel Ray