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çevrimiçi: 1222 kişi  22 May 2025 
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  • 'I hate discussions of feminism that end up with who does the dishes,' she said. So do I. But at the end, there are always the damned dishes.
    Marilyn French
  • 'I must be getting somewhere near the centre of the earth.
  • 'I must be growing small again.' She got up and went to the table to measure herself by it, and found that, as nearly as she could guess, she was now about two feet high, and was going on shrinking rapidly: she soon found out that the cause of this was the fan she was holding, and she dropped it hastily, just in time to avoid shrinking away altogether.
  • 'I must go and get ready to play croquet with the Queen,' and she hurried out of the room.
  • 'I never heard of "Uglification,"' Alice ventured to say.
  • 'I quite agree with you,' said the Duchess; 'and the moral of that is-"Be what you would seem to be"-or if you'd like it put more simply-"Never imagine yourself not to be otherwise than what it might appear to others that what you were or might have been was not otherwise than what you had been would have appeared to them to be otherwise."'
  • 'I realize they say we are 'wacko' and 'out there, but we are the most rational of all.
    Brigitte Boisselier
  • 'I shall do nothing of the sort,' said the Mouse, getting up and walking away.
  • 'I won't indeed!' said Alice, in a great hurry to change the subject of conversation.
  • 'I'd rather finish my tea,' said the Hatter, with an anxious look at the Queen, who was reading the list of singers.
  • 'I'll tell it her,' said the Mock Turtle in a deep, hollow tone: 'sit down, both of you, and don't speak a word till I've finished.'
  • 'I'm a poor man, your Majesty,' the Hatter began, in a trembling voice, '-and I hadn't begun my tea-not above a week or so-and what with the bread-and-butter getting so thin-and the twinkling of the tea-'
  • 'I'm getting tired of this.
  • 'I'm sure I'm not Ada,' she said, 'for her hair goes in such long ringlets, and mine doesn't go in ringlets at all; and I'm sure I can't be Mabel, for I know all sorts of things, and she, oh!
  • 'I've seen hatters before,' she said to herself; 'the March Hare will be much the most interesting, and perhaps as this is May it won't be raving mad-at least not so mad as it was in March.' As she said this, she looked up, and there was the Cat again, sitting on a branch of a tree.
  • 'I've so often read in the newspapers, at the end of trials, "There was some attempts at applause, which was immediately suppressed by the officers of the court," and I never understood what it meant till now.'
  • 'I've tried the roots of trees, and I've tried banks, and I've tried hedges,' the Pigeon went on, without attending to her; 'but those serpents!
  • 'I-I'm a little girl,' said Alice, rather doubtfully, as she remembered the number of changes she had gone through that day.
  • 'If any one of them can explain it,' said Alice, (she had grown so large in the last few minutes that she wasn't a bit afraid of interrupting him,) 'I'll give him sixpence.
  • 'If I eat one of these cakes,' she thought, 'it's sure to make SOME change in my size; and as it can't possibly make me larger, it must make me smaller, I suppose.'

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