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Girls And Boys Quotes

Quotes tagged as "girls-and-boys" Showing 1-17 of 17
Emma Cline
“That was our mistake, I think. One of many mistakes. To believe that boys were acting with a logic that we could someday understand. To believe that their actions had any meaning beyond thoughtless impulse. We were like conspiracy theorists, seeing portent and intention in every detail, wishing desperately that we mattered enough to be the object of planning and speculation. But they were just boys. Silly and young and straightforward; they weren't hiding anything.”
Emma Cline, The Girls

“Girls, if a boy says something that isn't funny, you don't have to laugh.”
Amy Poehler

“If you ignore the mountain, doesn't mean mountain will ignore you too..”
Tanveer Mazhar

“I think every girl's dream is to find a bad boy at the right time, when he wants to not be bad anymore.”
Taylor Swift

Aman Jassal
“Tears are the biggest weapon used by every girl against the boys with a success rate of hundred percent.”
Aman Jassal, Rainbow - the shades of love

Qalandar Nawaz
“You call her a Bitch,
Because she throws attitude?
Gentlemen, You need to Grow up!
Try to be modest in Her Eyes,
Not a disgust in Her Insights!”
Qalandar Nawaz

Toffee
“Being friendzoned is like standing near fire. You stand there to seek some warmth, but get burnt instead.”
Toffee, Finding Juliet

Kiera Cass
“If I could face reporters and dignitaries, I could face a boy.”
Kiera Cass, The Crown

“i hate it when girls says im done over and over again but they still stays with the man they done with.”
Futty-fuze

Natalie Bina
“And then he leaned forward and my stomach collapsed, taking in that last breath. I closed my eyes and watched in awe as all the butterflies flew up into the sky, free, mingling with the exploding lights.”
Natalie Bina, The High Road

Natalie Bina
“The girl. Was that who I was? I was the girl just like they were the boys. Was that how we were going to address each other for the entirety of this year? How family-feeling.”
Natalie Bina, The High Road

Aman Jassal
“It’s not difficult to put a girl in bottle; especially when she thinks, she is the boss.”
Aman Jassal, Rainbow - the shades of love

Brené Brown
“As we get older, the consequences of being tough and independent, when you're supposed to be tender and helpless increase in severity. For young girls the penalties range from a stern look to descriptions like "tomboy" or "headstrong". But as we get older, the consequence of being too assertive or too independent take on a darker nature: shame, ridicule, blame, and judgement. Most of us were too young and having too much fun to notice when we crossed the fine line into behavior not becoming of a lady: actions that call for a painful penalty. Now, as a woman and a mother of both a daughter and a son, I can tell you exactly when it happens. It happens on the day girls start spitting farther, shooting better, and completing more passes than boys. When that day comes, we start to get the message in subtle and not so subtle ways that its best if we focus on staying thin, minding our manners, and not being so smart or speaking out so much in class that we call attention to our intellect. This is a pivital day for boys too. This is the moment when they're introduced to the white horse. Emotional stoicism and self control are rewarded. Displays of emotion are punished. Vulnerability is weakness. Anger becomes an acceptable substitute for fear, which is forbidden.”
Brené Brown, Rising Strong: The Reckoning. The Rumble. The Revolution.

“I'm just saying: Don't change yourself for some boy.”
Madelyn Whitcomb

H.C.  Roberts
“Nothing,” she replied, which in girl language, of course, means everything.”
H.C. Roberts, Harp and the Lyre: Exposed

H.C.  Roberts
“He was persistent, and he was good.”
H.C. Roberts, Harp and the Lyre: Exposed

H.C.  Roberts
“What’s a LAN?” Viona asked.

Darryl scoffed.

Patiently, Owen explained to the novice, “It’s a gaming meet thing. Competitors link up on a ‘local area network’ together.”

“So there’s no lag,” Darryl chimed in.

Viona felt too silly to ask what a LAG was.”
H.C. Roberts, Harp and the Lyre: Exposed