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British
«I have no interest in Shakespeare and all that British nonsense... I just wanted to get famous and all the rest is hogwash.»
«I tell you, as one who has studied the whole situation, I don't think Hitler is a fool - he is not going to challenge the British Empire»
Author: David Lloyd George
(Prime Minister)
| Keywords:
British, British Empire, Hitler, studied, the British
«No one can be as calculatedly rude as the British, which amazes Americans, who do not understand studied insult and can only offer abuse as a substitute.»
«Much of what passes for quality on British television is no more than a reflection of the narrow elite which controls it and has always thought that its tastes were synonymous with quality.»
«Nothing could be more inappropriate to American literature than its English source since the Americans are not British in sensibility.»
Author: Wallace Stevens
(Poet)
| Keywords:
American literature, British, inappropriate, sensibility, The Americans
«ROUNDHEAD, n. A member of the Parliamentarian party in the English civil war --so called from his habit of wearing his hair short, whereas his enemy, the Cavalier, wore his long. There were other points of difference between them, but the fashion in hair was the fundamental cause of quarrel. The Cavaliers were royalists because the king, an indolent fellow, found it more convenient to let his hair grow than to wash his neck. This the Roundheads, who were mostly barbers and soap-boilers, deemed an injury to trade, and the royal neck was therefore the object of their particular indignation. Descendants of the belligerents now wear their hair all alike, but the fires of animosity enkindled in that ancient strife smoulder to this day beneath the snows of British civility.»
Author: Ambrose Bierce
(Editor, Journalist, Writer)
| Keywords:
Ancient of Days, animosities, animosity, barber, barbered, Barbers, belligerent, boiler, British, British and, Cavalier, civil, civilities, civility, civil war, convenient, deemed, descendant, descendants, English Civil War, enkindled, enkindles, fires, indignation, indolent, injury, member, mostly, neck, parliamentarian, quarrel, Roundhead, royal, royalist, smoulder, snows, so-called, soap, soaps, strife, The Civil War, The Descendants, the English, the king, The Object of, to this day, wash, wore
«That whether you are British, American or some other nationality, the No 1 task is to move from inter-dependence -- which can be good or bad -- to an integrated global community in which there is a shared future, shared responsibilities, shared prosperity and, most importantly, shared values. . . . The only way we can live together is if we say the celebration of our differences requires us to say that our common humanity matters more.»
Author: Bill Clinton
(President)
| Keywords:
American values, British, British and, celebration, celebrations, dependence, differences, global, importantly, integrate, integrated, integrates, inter, interred, most importantly, No 1, responsibilities, shared, some other, The Celebration
«I had the patriotic conviction that, given great leadership of the sort I heard from Winston Churchill in the radio broadcasts to which we listened, there was almost nothing that the British people could not do»
Author: Margaret Thatcher
(Politician, Prime Minister)
| Keywords:
British, British people, broadcasts, Churchill, listened, the British, Winston Churchill
«They (the British) are like their own beer; froth on top, dregs at bottom, the middle excellent»
Author: Voltaire
(Philosopher, Writer)
| Keywords:
at bottom, British, dregs, froth, frothing, the British
«I got into my bones the essential structure of the ordinary British sentence-which is a noble thing.»
Author: Winston Churchill
(Author, Orator, Prime Minister)
| Keywords:
bones, British, British and, sentence structure, structure