Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ

Bookmark Quotes

Quotes tagged as "bookmark" Showing 1-13 of 13
“The world is your bookmark.”
joelbooks

“...when everything changes, I need a bookmark - I need you...”
John Geddes, A Familiar Rain

Israelmore Ayivor
“The attitude you pose is greatly influenced by the links of friendships you bookmark. Good friends, good attitudes; best friends, best attitudes. Guess what for toxic friends...!”
Israelmore Ayivor

“When a bookmark tumbles out of an old book pristine and unwrinkled, it is like a gasp of breath from another century.”
Don Borchert, Free for All: Oddballs, Geeks, and Gangstas in the Public Library

Julie   Murphy
“I try not to cringe. Dog-earing a book feels like a violation of some sacred unspoken rule.”
Julie Murphy, Puddin'

Nitya Prakash
“People aren't books. You can't bookmark your favourite pages to return to whenever you're feeling lonely; when the nights are too cold and you need something familiar to keep you warm, you can't reopen their spines and wear out their pages and call that obsession love.”
Nitya Prakash

Alice Feeney
“I bookmark that thought.”
Alice Feeney, Sometimes I Lie

Darnell Lamont Walker
“I used to bookmark relationships, hoping to pick up where I left off when I returned.”
Darnell Lamont Walker, Creep

Eddie Robson
“a book with a bookmark inside implies someone has merely gone away, and will be back to finish it soon. Removing the bookmark takes on a horrible finality”
Eddie Robson, Drunk on All Your Strange New Words

Louise Penny
“Every now and then, he pulled the books out and touched the bookmarks but hadn't yet found the strength to pick up where they left off, to read the rest of the story.”
Louise Penny, How the Light Gets In

Nanette L. Avery
“History left behind is like a bookmark in a classic.”
Nanette L. Avery

Kathleen Stock
“In a 2018 Populous survey in the UK involving 2,074 respondents (49% male, 51%female, weighted across a range of age groups), participants were asked 'to think about a person who was born male and has male genitalia but who identifies as a woman'. They were then asked: 'In your own personal view would you consider this person to be a woman or a man?' 19% answered 'woman'; 52% of respondents answered 'man', 7% said 'not a man or a woman', 20% said 'don't know', and 3% preferred not to say.”
Kathleen Stock, Material Girls: Why Reality Matters for Feminism

“The Leaf of a Tree as Bookmark for a Book...”
Sino Melo