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çevrimiçi: 2023 kişi  06 Haz 2025 
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which

zm. hangisi, hangi, hangisini
s. hangi
  • Many parts of the granite statues were found, the most important of which had features close to Ramses II. The statue needs some restoration and weighs between four and five tons.
    Zahi Hawass
  • Many people flounder about in life because they do not have a purpose, an objective toward which to work.
    George Halas
  • Many people on the political left found my work psychologically liberating. They began to say: once you realize that standards emerge historically, then you can see through and discard all the norms to which we have been falsely enslaved.
    Stanley Fish
  • Many people who did not die right away came down with nausea, headache, diarrhea, malaise, and fever, which lasted several days. Doctors could not be certain whether some of these symptoms were the result of radiation or nervous shock.
    John Hersey
  • Many people would no more think of entering journalism than the sewage business - which at least does us all some good.
    Stephen Fry
  • Many scientists will have to contribute to the solution of the great problem; they will have to follow up and measure all those phenomena in which the atomic structure is directly expressed.
    Johannes Stark
  • Many things are unknown to the wisest, and the best men can never wholly divest themselves of passions and affections... nothing can or ought to be permanent but that which is perfect.
    Algernon Sydney
  • Many things there be in the scripture, which have a carnal fulfilling, even there where they be spoken or done; and yet have another spiritual signification, to be fulfilled long after in Christ and his kingdom, and yet never known till the thing be done.
    William Tyndale
  • Many who have had an opportunity of knowing any more about mathematics confuse it with arithmetic, and consider it an arid science. In reality, however, it is a science which requires a great amount of imagination.
    Sofia Kovalevskaya
  • Many words are not wanting to show that the particular view of each court occasioned the dangers which affected the public tranquillity; yet the whole is charged to my account. Nor is this sufficient.
    Robert Walpole
  • Many writers who choose to be active in the world lose not virtue but time, and that stillness without which literature cannot be made.
    Gore Vidal
  • Many years ago I was in another soap opera called The Newcomers which was on twice a week for three years. I really don't think I could do another stint like that again.
    Jeremy Bulloch
  • Margaret Thatcher was fearful of German unification because she believed that this would bring an immediate and formidable increase of economic strength to a Germany which was already the strongest economic partner in Europe.
    Douglas Hurd
  • Margaret Thatcher, growing up in a bombed and battered Britain, derived a distrust which has grown with the years not just of Germany but of all continental Europe.
    Douglas Hurd
  • Mark all mathematical heads which be wholly and only bent on these sciences, how solitary they be themselves, how unfit to live with others, how unapt to serve the world.
    Roger Ascham
  • Mark all mathematical heads which be wholly and only bent on these sciences, how solitary they be themselves, how unfit to live with others, how unapt to serve the world.
    Roger Ascham
  • Marketing is a very good thing, but it shouldn't control everything. It should be the tool, not that which dictates.
    Nicolas Roeg
  • Markets can't think about anything beyond about three months. This is very long-term for markets, which is why the important things in life have got to be taken outside of the marketplace.
    Susan George
  • Marriage - a book of which the first chapter is written in poetry and the remaining chapters in prose.
    Beverley Nichols
  • Marriage - a book of which the first chapter is written in poetry and the remaining chapters in prose.
    Beverley Nichols

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