Gaston Gaudio Quotes
Quotes to Explore
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I used to always run off at the mouth and talk about people. I just didn't know that it would make a living for me.
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I used to fantasize that Paul McCartney would marry my sister.
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Our forefathers used to live longer and healthy lives.
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I used the best technique that I knew to protect my files.
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Daytime soap operas, which I used to adore, have been declining in quality and importance for over a decade, and I gradually stopped monitoring them.
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It used to be, it is accepted scientific wisdom the Earth is flat, and this heretic named Galileo was branded a denier.
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The word 'potential' used to hang over me like a cloud.
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One of the advantages of appearing in such a play is that you begin to understand it properly, I feel Ophelia's tragedy was that she had been so used by everybody and felt that she bore a great burden of guilt.
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American influence is not what it used to be.
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I've learned not to be as maniacal as I used to be.
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Herbs deserve to be used much more liberally.
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I used to work as a proofreader at Merrill Lynch.
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I could always sing, from a really young age, but my voice was really weird. I used to make my mum turn up the radio every day in our house. She was well into music so I got that from her.
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You get used to working with one choreographer. You kind of get stuck in that vein and you work your way out of it, picking up someone else's style, their flavor. It takes a bit of time.
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In school that used to happen a lot: they'd get me to sing and then they'd hate me for it.
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It was a period when they used to read into our lyrics a lot, used to think there was more in them than there was.
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I got my first guitar when I was 15, and I just used to fool about with it, more or less, as time went by, though, I got more interested.
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Girls who used to tell me I ain't cool enough now text me pics saying you can tear this up!
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God wants to use us as He used His own Son.
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I feel like there's a hunger in the culture now for the live experience maybe as a counterpoint to the more sort of synthetic lives that we've been living.
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Jason Rezaian is coming home. A courageous journalist for The Washington Post who wrote about the daily lives and hopes of the Iranian people, he's been held for a year and a half. He embodies the brave spirit that gives life to the freedom of the press. Jason has already been reunited with his wife and mom.
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I love that synergy between being entertainers and having people respond. There's no greater reward.
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I'm used to it.