A Quote by Navjot Singh Sidhu

Statistics are like miniskirts, they reveal more than what they hide. — © Navjot Singh Sidhu
Statistics are like miniskirts, they reveal more than what they hide.
Statistics are like miniskirts: They give you good ideas but hide the important things.
Surfaces reveal so much. The marks painters make reveal so much about their work and themselves; their sense of proportion, line, and rhythm is more telling than their signature. Looking at the surfaces of nature may offer equivalent revelations. What do these shapes and patterns reveal about the world and their creator? Surfaces hide so much.
It takes more courage to reveal insecurities than to hide them, more strength to relate to people then to dominate them, more 'manhood' to abide by thought-out principles rather than blind reflex. Toughness is in the soul and spirit, not in muscles and an immature mind.
I don't even wear miniskirts on a night out, so I definitely won't be wearing miniskirts in the ring.
I wore miniskirts when I was younger. We used to hide them in our bags before going out.
Successive governments in the U.K. have worked to create a more flexible labour market, which also meant labour insecurity. They allowed wages to drop and non-wage benefits to shrivel, creating worse inequality than statistics reveal.
Medical statistics are a little bit like a bikini: what they reveal is suggestive, but what they conceal is vital.
The dressmaker doesn't have problems unless the dress has to hide rather than reveal.
We hide in relationships. We hide in material possessions. We hide in ambitions, secret desires, hates, frustrations, jealousy, self-ptiy, in our insecurity - and more than anything our vanity and our egotism.
The beauty of doing a series is that, over the course of time, it's like peeling an onion. You're able to reveal these layers, more and more. You just don't want to reveal too much, too soon.
I do not ... reject the use of statistics in medicine, but I condemn not trying to get beyond them and believing in statistics as the foundation of medical science. ... Statistics ... apply only to cases in which the cause of the facts observed is still [uncertain or] indeterminate. ... There will always be some indeterminism ... in all the sciences, and more in medicine than in any other. But man's intellectual conquest consists in lessening and driving back indeterminism in proportion as he gains ground for determinism by the help of the experimental method.
I don't like labels. I think they conceal more than they reveal, sort of like a bikini.
No one lights a lamp in order to hide it behind the door: the purpose of light is to create more light, to open people's eyes, to reveal the marvels around.
He uses statistics like a drunk uses lamp-posts, more for support than illumination.
The shadows: some hide, others reveal.
Adversity is wont to reveal genius, prosperity to hide it.
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