Top 1200 First Grade Quotes & Sayings - Page 15

Explore popular First Grade quotes.
Last updated on November 7, 2024.
When I was in the seventh grade I did a report about the environment and the loss of species. It was supposed to be only a few pages, but ended up being nearly 50.
I did attend Catholic schools up to the ninth grade, and I admire much in the Catholic Church.
I finished all the math books by third grade and most of the reading books. So I was considered disruptive. — © Tyrone Hayes
I finished all the math books by third grade and most of the reading books. So I was considered disruptive.
I got sick of high school really quick, and I dropped out in 10th or 11th grade. I was in such a rush to grow up that I think I missed a lot of it.
I've loved vampires for a very long time. In eighth grade, I guess, my research paper was on vampires.
I had not seen lawns till fifth grade - big green lawns.
I have this bookmark with glued-on macaroni. I made it in the fourth grade while in detention for giving a girl a tattoo using two rocks rubbed together and a stick.
I'm dyslexic, although they didn't have a word for it when I was in grade school. The teachers said I had 'word blindness.'
I wrote 'Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret' right out of my own experiences and my own feelings when I was in sixth grade.
I played football in the ninth and 10th grade. I looked a lot like Joe Namath, so I think my looks got me there more than my abilities.
When you're a kid you're already trying to create your own world and organize the one in front of you, but then you get all insecure around 6th grade and don't think you have a right to share that.
All of us learn to write in the second grade. Most of us go on to greater things.
I was a good student. By 8th grade, you've basically learned everything. By senior year, we was drinking, we was kickin' it, we was rapping. It wasn't really like business, hard work.
If I look back on my life, you can almost tell the story of it through pop songs. Romances as a teenager, your first kiss, first love, first heartbreak. — © Keren Woodward
If I look back on my life, you can almost tell the story of it through pop songs. Romances as a teenager, your first kiss, first love, first heartbreak.
My most memorable teacher was Rich Campe, my third-grade teacher at Fairlands Elementary in Pleasanton, California.
We started making movies when we were really young, in the fourth grade... if you can call them movies.
I taped the autopsy photos from Marilyn Monroe's death to my lunch box in fifth grade, and I would write stories in which someone inevitably died.
It was probably in third grade - I had a super fake, gold herringbone chain. I don't remember if it was my mom's or how I got it, but ever since then, I've loved chains.
I remember in third grade, I asked my mom, 'How does an engine work?' So my mom bought me a book.
My big break was back in the third grade playing the third monkey in 'Horton Hears a Who.
You have to edit it, mix it, color grade it, there are processes and the audience doesn't care when they binge-watch a show. They think in four weeks you should get the next season.
I was playing sports all the time, and my parents, Anne and John, encouraged me to play in grade school and high school.
My mom actually taught fifth grade, so... I'm good with fifth graders. That's, like, my specialty.
I got a .30-30 for Christmas in the seventh grade. It wasn't what I asked for, by the way.
I only went to the third grade because my father only went to the fourth and I didn't want to pass him.
I went back to school for the end of eighth grade and for all of high school, which was awesome.
I'm watching my own daughter grow up. I see this overt sexual culture coming at her like a Mack truck. She's in seventh grade.
Yes, the first draft is the key. That's why I put so much energy, focus, and attention on the first draft, because I respect that first go at the story. If I don't have the key in that first draft, I invariably won't get it in subsequent drafts, though I can craft around it.
Without either the first or second amendment, we would have no liberty; the first allows us to find out what's happening, the second allows us to do something about it! The second will be taken away first, followed by the first and then the rest of our freedoms.
The earliest recollection I have of being in the kitchen and cooking was in the third grade, and we lived in Germany. And I remember cooking scrambled eggs.
I used to be the Number One scorer in 5th grade. I used to, yeah. I could always shoot deep.
I was writing and cartooning and writing short stories from grade school on.
I would certainly look at a proposal for tuition-free community college for two years if the students kept a certain high grade-point average.
I was trained on piano - that was part of grade school and high school.
In the end, I did end up repeating seventh grade.
The very first film, documentary that I made, was called 'The First Year.' It was 11 years ago and I followed these five novice teachers. I was actually with them on their first day of school and followed them for their first year.
I know what you're thinking: why is Chris Rock bagging groceries? But I dropped out of high school in the tenth grade, so if I couldn't tell jokes this is exactly what I'd be doing.
I'm in my mid-40s now, and I came out in 11th grade, so I must have been 17. So that's quite a long time ago, and the temperature and the culture was different. — © Lisa Cholodenko
I'm in my mid-40s now, and I came out in 11th grade, so I must have been 17. So that's quite a long time ago, and the temperature and the culture was different.
Niggas on the internet know everything. You could make a freestyle tape in the fourth grade and they'll know about it.
After about fourth grade, I do remember borrowing my mother's old portable Olivetti and typing stories out on the back of photocopies of journal articles.
Was it not most meet that a woman should first see the risen Saviour? She was first in the transgression; let her be first in the justification. In yon garden she was first to work our wo; let her in that other garden be the first to see Him who works our weal. She takes first the apple of that bitter tree which brings us all our sorrow; let her be the first to see the Mighty Gardener, who has planted a tree which brings forth fruit unto everlasting life.
I moved around 13 different times before I was in fifth grade, not having money, not having a lot of friends.
O woman, born first to believe us; Yea, also born first to forget; Born first to betray and deceive us, Yet first to repent and regret.
You look at pictures of me when I was in eighth grade, and I look completely different.
I have a hernia scar from when I was a kid. I had a hernia when I was like in fourth grade.
My big break was back in the third grade playing the third monkey in 'Horton Hears a Who.'
I'm an Armory girl. I've been racing here since eighth grade. Our relay won here my freshman year, but winning the Wanamaker Mile is even bigger. That's huge.
You can go as far back as fifth grade, and you will find me tinkering with media and computers, making things that are a little off the beaten track.
I was a big baseball player, and my passion in life, in third grade, was collecting baseball cards. That was my childhood thing. — © Alan Ritchson
I was a big baseball player, and my passion in life, in third grade, was collecting baseball cards. That was my childhood thing.
I'm from Wisconsin; well, that's where I went to school from, like, sixth grade till I graduated high school.
I loved school. But when I started 'Party of Five' in the fifth grade, I was taken out of school and tutored on the set.
I truly believe that God brought this, Dorothy Day script to me, because for a long time up until I was in eight grade - I wanted to be a nun.
When we home schooled my oldest, Jasper, in eighth grade, I saw how empowering it is for a child to learn in their own way. That rebooted my thinking about education.
In seventh grade, false feelings and false faces are the rule.
In fourth grade I had a high school reading level, but I didn't want to go to school and I didn't feel I belonged there.
I was a very, very serious child... I was valedictorian of my kindergarten and eighth-grade class.
I'm dyslexic, although they didn't have a word for it when I was in grade school. The teachers said I had 'word blindness.
I'm from Cleveland, Ohio. I was the only black girl in my grade. And I was just, like, really dorky. Like, I wasn't cool.
I went to Catholic grade school, so we sang a lot of religious songs: 'O Holy Night,' 'Silent Night.'
I quit school in ninth grade, even though I was good at the studies. I knew I didn't need school for what I wanted.
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