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  • Broadly speaking, the short words are the best, and the old words best of all. -- Winston Churchill
  • But what is drama? Broadly speaking, it is whatever by imitative action rouses interest or gives pleasure. -- George Pierce Baker
  • But what is drama? Broadly speaking, it is whatever by imitative action rouses interest or gives pleasure. -- George Pierce Baker
  • Broadly Americans agree that women need access to health care to prevent medical disasters and to prevent pregnancy. -- Sandra Fluke
  • Broadly speaking, we are in the middle of a race between human skill as a means and human folly as an end. -- Bertrand Russell
  • Broadly speaking, nervous women may be divided into two classes - those who are really nervous, and those who imagine themselves to be so. -- Margaret Elizabeth Sangster
  • Out of intense complexities intense simplicities emerge. Broadly speaking, the short words are the best, and the old words when short are best of all. -- Winston Churchill
  • Broadly put, philosophers think: politicians maneuver. Jefferson's genius was that he was both and could do both, often simultaneously. Such is the art of power. -- Jon Meacham
  • Broadly speaking, the discovery of X-rays has increased the keenness of our vision ten thousand times, and we can now 'see' the individual atoms and molecules. -- William Henry Bragg
  • Broadly speaking, human beings may be divided into three classes: those who are billed to death, those who are worried to death, and those who are bored to death. -- Winston Churchill
  • Broadly speaking, most people lived their lives in a kind of unwilling conformity. The thing was that they were offered, as time went by, various kinds of freedom, most of which were sort of dummy freedoms somehow. -- Neal Ascherson
  • Broadly speaking, in the past few years, we've more than doubled the editorial staff [in Mother Jones], as part of ramping up daily operations that have resulted in huge gains in audience, a slew of awards, new multimedia endeavors, and of course scoops like the 47 percent. -- Clara Jeffery
  • Broadly speaking, Protestants like to be good and have invented theology in order to keep themselves so, whereas Catholics like to be bad and have invented theology in order to keep their neighbors good. Hence, the social character of Catholicism and the individual character of Protestantism. -- Bertrand Russell
  • Broadly speaking, there are two approaches to crime: the realistically detailed police procedural, usually grim and downbeat, and the more left-field, joyous theatre of ideas in which past masters once specialised. Knowing that I would never be able to handle the former, I set about reviving the latter. -- Christopher Fowler
  • Study broadly and without fear. -- John Green
  • Defined broadly enough, mathematics encompasses everything. -- John Allen Paulos
  • Learning is a tunnel experience that makes us think more broadly. -- Anna Deavere Smith
  • Every news organization should ideally be as broadly representative as possible. -- Judy Woodruff
  • Very broadly, literature concerns itself with the internal, cinema with the external. -- Martin Amis
  • If you know the way broadly you will see it in everything. -- Miyamoto Musashi
  • Religion?" Mr Kumar grinned broadly. "I don't believe in religion. Religion is darkness. -- Yann Martel
  • Crime and legal stories, broadly speaking, are just where my interest happens to lie. -- William Landay
  • Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are, and have been, totally known. Also, broadly disliked. -- Christopher Michael Cillizza
  • We define content very broadly. Representing chefs, designers, makeup artists - it's all important. -- Ari Emanuel
  • Kundalini is almost a misleading word, unless you define it as broadly as I do. -- Frederick Lindemann, 1st Viscount Cherwell
  • Philosophy, most broadly viewed, is the critical survey of existence from the standpoint of value. -- Sidney Hook
  • Ms. Clinton, like the Obama administration more broadly, believes that appeasing Islamists... promotes peace and stability. -- Louie Gohmert
  • To succeed, you also have to know how to make choices and how to think more broadly. -- Bill Gates
  • Software was the key element that would determine how useable and how broadly applicable the machine was. -- Bill Gates
  • It's best to incorporate a broadly eclectic point of view, and let whatever moves you be your inspiration. -- Wendy Carlos
  • There is no example on the planet of a successful economy with broadly shared prosperity and a shrinking, weak government. -- William J. Clinton
  • Asked if Stalin was an antisemite, Robert Conquest replied: Yes, but it hardly noticed. He was broadly and generously anti-human. -- John Derbyshire
  • After 1945 what happened was rather the opposite: with one major exception boundaries stayed broadly intact and people were moved instead. -- Tony Judt
  • Make your creed simply and broadly out of the revelation of God, and you will keep it to the end. -- Phillips Brooks
  • To speak broadly, the troubles of life as we find them are mainly traceable to the heart or the purse. -- Charlotte Perkins Gilman
  • Read a lot. Read broadly... Tell stories to your friends, and pay attention to when they get bored... Write a lot. -- John Green
  • It is said that the Devil has all the best tunes. This is broadly true. But Heaven has the best choreographers -- Terry Pratchett
  • What distinguishes Cambridge from Oxford, broadly speaking, is that nobody who has been to Cambridge feels impelled to write about it. -- A. A. Milne
  • I've always read broadly: literary fiction, sci-fi, fantasy, chick lit, historical, dystopian, nonfiction, memoir. I've even read Westerns. I prefer female protagonists. -- Sandra Cisneros
  • democracy always makes for materialism, because the only kind of equality that you can guarantee to a whole people is, broadly speaking, physical. -- Katharine Fullerton Gerould
  • Yet again, unscientific claims were being circulated broadly, but the scientists' refutation of them was published where only fellow scientists would see it. -- Naomi Oreskes
  • One must have at least a readiness to love the other person, broadly speaking, if one is to be able to understand him. -- Rollo May
  • Other paths would include making nuclear fission cheap enough and safe enough that people broadly embrace it, so that could be scaled up. -- Bill Gates
  • Sam Cameron has managed the near impossible: to have lived in Number Ten for three years and maintained a benign and broadly positive press. -- Andy Coulson
  • Lightsong met the man's eyes, then smiled broadly, looking down at the God King. "My life to yours," Lifesong said. "My breath become yours. -- Brandon Sanderson
  • Inheritance Tax; - it is, broadly speaking; a voluntary levy paid by those who distrust their heirs more than they dislike the Inland Revenue -- Roy Jenkins
  • I am broadly concerned about the slow death of free speech, but particularly in universities and also with regards to the climate change debate. -- Judith Curry
  • The success of the future does not lie solely on the safety of the past, but relies broadly on the security of the present. -- Israelmore Ayivor
  • My fascination is broadly with biology and the fact that our increased understanding of biology allows for breakthroughs in a broad set of diseases. -- Bill Gates
  • Invention, using the term most broadly, and imitation, are the two legs, so to call them, on which the human race historically has walked. -- William James
  • At a very basic level, people need to know that there is constancy in their jobs and, more broadly, in where the organization is headed. -- Tom Rath
  • At no time in the past century has public distrust of the government been so broadly distributed across the political spectrum, as it is today. -- Phil Zimmermann
  • Real security, in other words, is inseparable from issues of energy policy; education; public health; preservation of soils, forests, and waters; and broadly based, sustainable prosperity. -- David W. Orr
  • Somewhat more broadly, I will suggest that animals should be permitted to bring suit, with human beings as their representatives, to prevent violations of current law. -- Cass Sunstein
  • I did not end up as broadly educated as my Cambridge colleagues, but I graduated probably better equipped to write a book on my chosen subject. -- Richard Dawkins
  • I think, broadly speaking, the US military's role - US military activism in various parts of the Islamic world over the past several decades has been counterproductive. -- James Mattis
  • The E.U.-U.S. Open Aviation Area agreement therefore envisages the establishment of a broadly similar cooperation framework between the Commission and the Department of Transportation. -- Neelie Kroes
  • I use the word power broadly. Even more important than military and economic power is the power of ideas, the power of compassion, and the power of hope. -- Condoleezza Rice
  • If you look more broadly at injury, so it includes also accidents, it's the largest cause of death in children of school age in Mexico. It's an enormous problem. -- Julio Frenk
  • It may be broadly stated that.....of all animals kept for the recreation of mankind the horse is alone capable of exciting a passion that shall be absolutely hopeless. -- Bret Harte
  • Knowledge in my view is a form of action. It involves endeavors to get it right, and more broadly it concerns aimings, which can be functional rather than intentional. -- Ernest Sosa
  • As long as government is allowed to collect all Internet data, the perceived exigency will drive honest civil servants to reach more broadly and deeply into our networked lives. -- Yochai Benkler
  • Very broadly speaking, you can put directors into two areas: One for whom you work, and the other with whom you work. And I prefer the latter, for obvious reasons. -- John Hurt
  • If I had to summarize, most broadly, my concerns as a writer, I'd say the question 'How then must we live?' is at the heart of it, for me. -- Claire Messud
  • There I am, in the Grade Six class picture, smiling broadly. Happy as a clam, is what my mother says for happy. I am happy as a clam: hardshelled, firmly closed. -- Margaret Atwood
  • Biology can be divided into the study of proximate causes, the study of the physiological sciences (broadly conceived), and into the study of ultimate (evolutionary) causes, the subject of natural history. -- Ernst Mayr
  • When it comes to pay raises, Congress always plays the role of Grinch. The bill extends an existing pay freeze for Vice President Joe Biden, specifically, and senior political appointees broadly. -- Susan Davis
  • We must ensure that the global market is embedded in broadly shared values and practices that reflect global social needs, and that all the world's people share the benefits of globalization. -- Kofi Annan
  • That is to say, epic poetry has been invented many times and independently; but, as the needs which prompted the invention have been broadly similar, so the invention itself has been. -- Lascelles Abercrombie
  • President Bush's war on Iraq is viewed broadly in Islamic communities as an attack on Islam, and thus the President has alienated a large part of one fifth of the world's population. -- John Olver
  • A great book seeks to explain causality, not correlation. It works to point out the circumstances in which it works, and where it doesn't. And in so doing, it is broadly applicable. -- Clayton Christensen
  • Because some people have sex with people of the same sex, an entire culture has been created, broadly speaking, out of oppression. Which in a rational world would not be an issue. -- Neil Tennant
  • In fact, I think more broadly about what an audience requires, but I want an audience to be fascinated by the process of finding an answer, or finding out there isn't one. -- Robert Redford
  • Call your opinions your creed, and you will change them every week. Make your creed simply and broadly out of the revelation of God, and you will keep it to the end. -- Phillips Brooks
  • I have started to think that the great, decisive moments that broadly govern our lives are far less conscious at the time than they seem later when we are reminiscing and taking stock. -- Sándor Márai
  • Two's company and three's a crowd, but seven can be an uprising. And the seven can become 70 or 700 or 7000 very quickly if the sense of being wronged is felt broadly and truly enough. -- Michael Leunig
  • I have started to think that the great, decisive moments that broadly govern our lives are far less conscious at the time than they seem later when we are reminiscing and taking stock. -- Sándor Márai
  • When capital owners are few, the private-property conduits of necessity create vast savings reservoirs for those few. If there were many owners, the same conduits would broadly irrigate the economy with purchasing power. -- Louis O. Kelso
  • Freedom in economic arrangements is itself a component of freedom broadly understood, so economic freedom is an end in itself ... Economic freedom is also an indispensable means toward the achievement of political freedom. -- Milton Friedman
  • Firms are a bit concerned about things like oil prices and US growth but actually the change (in firms expectations) is quite small so I think broadly theyre looking for more of the same, -- Peter Morgan
  • Comedy as a genre is the one that has given me maximum success, and I do broadly get associated with this genre. I thoroughly enjoy comedy, especially because it is inherent to my personality. -- Riteish Deshmukh
  • With all the other -isms that we deal with, that sort of nameless -ism that we have in too many of our hearts against the poor in this country is what wounds us most broadly. -- Benjamin Todd Jealous
  • More broadly across time and cultures, it seems, one perennial piece of advice to father has been the importance of acting tenderly toward their children. The New Father, it turns out, is an old story. -- David Blankenhorn
  • Lieutenant al-Kaseasbeh's dedication, courage and service to his country and family represent universal human values that stand in opposition to the cowardice and depravity of ISIL, which has been so broadly rejected around the globe. -- Barack Obama
  • More broadly, strategic alliances are more difficult to manage and coordinate than single ventures; the potential for misunderstanding and disagreement, particularly between partners from different cultures, is great. Certainly many such alliances are short lived. -- Peter Dicken
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