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Quotes About Ceilings

The human memory is a salamander; it squiggles from point to point, slaloms its way improbably up walls and across ceilings.
~ Will Ferguson
In my house on the ceilings I have paintings of the rooms above... so I never have to go upstairs.
~ Steven Wright
The apartment was on the sixteenth floor. It was old-fashioned, which meant that the rooms were large and light-filled, the ceilings high enough to permit a constant circulation of air, and the walls thick enough for a man and his loving wife to have a stimulating argument at the top of their lungs without invading the nervous systems of surrounding neighbors. Raymond had rented the apartment furnished and nothing in the place beyond the books, the records, and the phonograph was his.
~ Richard Condon
Ryan saw the art and honor in creating smooth new walls and ceilings, enclosing the spaces in which people work and live.
~ Rick Mofina
Fiercely guard the passions igniting your heart, so that your flames reach the highest ceilings of success without the eyes of envy.
~ Suzy Kassem
BAME kids get discouraged - too many glass ceilings to break through.
~ Lenny Henry
If you've been apartment or home shopping and left disgusted because a realtor brought you into a space that hadn't been updated since 1977, you've experienced the visitors clubhouse at Wrigley. Ceilings on top of you, lockers smashed together, plastic tables cluttering the floor and carpet ripped straight off the Brady Bunch stairs.
~ Gabe Kapler
Higher ceilings allow the use indirect lighting, which is much healthier and reduces glare.
~ Helmut Jahn
Kate had been inside enough grand London homes not to publicly gape at the obvious wealth and beauty of the furnishings, but even she was impressed by the interiors, decorated with elegance and restraint in the Adam style. Even the ceilings were works of art—done up in pale shades of sage and blue, the colors separated by white plasterwork so intricate it almost appeared to be a more solid form of lace.
~ Julia Quinn
The giant console, high ceilings, and glass windows mean nothing than love from the heart.
~ Auliq Ice
The Albion was a spacious pub, built in the days when a public house with any pretensions to gentility had to have fourteen foot ceilings, brass taps and a polished wooden bar you skate down. ... Bert, in his reflective moments, considered that if heaven didn't have a well-appointed pub where a man could sit down over a beer for a yarn with the other angels, then he didn't want to go there.
~ Kerry Greenwood
American Ballet Theatre's rehearsal studios are at 890 Broadway, an old building where exposed pipes clank and hiss in uneven accompaniment to piano music. The high ceilings wear a toupee of dust. The wall paint peels like a newbie ballerina's toes.
~ Sascha Radetsky
There was not one straight floor from the foundation to the roof; the ceilings were so fantastically clouded by smoke and dust, that old woman might have told fortunes in them better than in grouts of tea;
~ Charles Dickens
There was not one straight floor from the foundation to the roof; the ceilings were so fantastically clouded by smoke and dust, that old women might have told fortunes in them better than in grouts of tea;
~ Charles Dickens
the floor and cubbyholes for mail against the wall. Upstairs the rooms were airy, with high ceilings and walls
~ Jennifer Weiner
Credit expansion results in the recurrence of economic crisis and periods of depression. Inflation makes the prices of all commodities and services soar. The attempts to enforce wage rates higher than those the unhampered market would have determined produce mass unemployment prolonged year after year. Price ceilings result in a drop in the supply of commodities affected. The economists have proved these theorems in an irrefutable way. No
~ Ludwig von Mises
To this end pitiful woodwork had been used instead of solid masonry; rickety ceilings had been propped up by fragile rafters, and beams that threatened on every stormy night to fall upon the heads of those beneath them; doors whose specialty was never to be shut, yet always to be banging; windows constructed with a peculiar view to letting in the draft when they were shut, and keeping out the air when they were open. The hand of genius had devised this lonely country inn;
~ Mary Elizabeth Braddon