Top 1200 School Years Quotes & Sayings - Page 17

Explore popular School Years quotes.
Last updated on December 20, 2024.
I feel proud I was part of the old school and still around in the new school.
Dad kept us out of school, but school comes and goes. Family is forever.
I wrote a lot of poetry in the last two years of high school, all about the same girl I was in love with. That was pretty awful. Did you know that in poetry, every line does not need to rhyme?
I went back to school for the end of eighth grade and for all of high school, which was awesome. — © Chandler Riggs
I went back to school for the end of eighth grade and for all of high school, which was awesome.
I had a column in high school for our school newspaper. I enjoy writing.
My dad had a soccer school that he used to run, the Mark Chamberlain Soccer Academy, I used to go to that for two years until the age of seven.
When I was at school, I auditioned for the school play as Queen Gertrude, and I fell in love with it there and then.
High school and college were my punk, formative years. I was playing hardcore, learning to be a musician. In bands, you tour, but you're paid nothing; you're playing to 50 people in a basement, sleeping in a van, and you love it.
In my generation, there was no sushi school, no cooking school, so people have to learn from working.
For a little while, my mom was a school teacher. And I went to the school that she taught.
Even at recess, in elementary school, it was just a known thing that I was one of the fastest in the school.
Up until the time I was 14 years old, I was sure that I was going to be a big-league baseball player. But that dream came to a rude awakening when I got cut from my high school baseball team.
When I was little, I went to a Jewish community day school for most of elementary school.
I was home schooled in high school but was definitely the nerd in middle school. — © Nicole Gale Anderson
I was home schooled in high school but was definitely the nerd in middle school.
Experience is the best of school masters, only the school fees are heavy.
I completed medical school at Loma Linda University School of Medicine in 1984.
I was editor of my high school literary magazine and a reporter for the school newspaper.
I finished high school there and then I went to Rhode Island School of Design.
I went to school at a place that also shaped my life, Boston Latin School.
My elder brothers were all put apprentices to different trades. I was put to the grammar-school at eight years of age, my father intending to devote me, as the tithe of his sons, to the service of the Church.
I played cricket at primary school but hardly at all at high school. I was more of a footballer.
I came from a private school, and public high school was the first time I ever went to a public school. So I went into it very preppy; I was wearing a lot of Abercrombie and Hollister. Then, my sophomore year, I started listening to rock bands. I had a boyfriend that took me to my first rock show, and I was just addicted to that.
Kyrie is a good guy. Spent a lot of time with him over the years because we were the same class in high school and ACC when he was at Duke. Then I was with him my rookie year in Cleveland.
For the next approximately three years, I have got Nathan to take care of. I know that once he graduates from high school, he will be off doing whatever it is he is going to be doing - probably playing ice hockey.
Sexuality didn't come into it when I was bullied, but for so many years, being LGBTQ was one of the biggest things you would be bullied for at school. Hopefully, as time goes on, it will be a completely accepted thing that people won't have to think about.
I do tend to take time off. A year and a half ago I went to film school, and before that I had taken years off at a time to be involved politically or this or that.
I still remember going to school on game day with my high school jersey on.
Doing well in school was a cool thing to do when I was in high school, so I had a blast.
I never bunked school. School was always the most special place for me.
Drama school, you know, I own an acting school, Actor Prepares.
I was constantly involved in music and theatre all through middle school and high school.
It was hard to leave my school. I've been going to the same school since kindergarden.
I went to a Catholic School, and underneath my school uniform, I wore a metal shirt.
I didn't go to normal children school. I went to sports school when I was 8. So I studied martial arts.
In high school, I was kind of a loner because I had moved to a new school.
I grew up in a rough area, went to an all-black school, public school.
I was a smart kid. I went to private school in middle school and got kicked out.
I love St. John's Prep as a school. I like the people there, it's a great school.
I never finished high school. In fact, I hated going to school. — © Daniel Humm
I never finished high school. In fact, I hated going to school.
I moved in fourth grade in the middle of the school year, and I was the new kid in school.
My vision is a blend of the old school and the new school, but with zero rules.
I always wanted to read. I always thought I was going to be a historian. I would go to school and study history and then end up in law school, once, I ran out of loot trying to be a history high school teacher. But my dream was always to place myself in a situation where I was always surrounded by books.
When I was in middle school and high school, I was over 100 pounds overweight.
When I was 18 years old I went to Shakespeare Company, the school, and I wrote a poem about my leaves - I felt like a tree that had no leaves. That is the life at 18.
I played in a punk rock band in high school called the High Heel Flip Flops. I was the drummer. I played drums for, like, four years.
I went to high school and university in Vancouver. Vancouver is really into yoga, so I have been doing it for years. The one thing that I know it helped me with for sure is changing the way that I think about and experience physical pain.
I have a lot of memories of Falls Church. I went to grade school in Madison Elementary School.
My father left school at 14 and became a fitter. He didn't want to be at school.
If I wanted to be a doctor today I'd go to math school not med school. — © Vinod Khosla
If I wanted to be a doctor today I'd go to math school not med school.
I wasn't really a dark kid, but I was in my head a lot. I got good grades all through my 16 years of Catholic school, but I was always writing these weird - and, I have to say, really bad - stories, filled with murder.
English was always my favorite subject in middle school and high school.
When I left school I went to Australia for a year and worked in the drama department of a school in Perth.
So the ethic I was taught in school resulted in the path I chose in my life following school.
My worst subject in school was school, but it turns out I'm great at starting them.
Wisdom was not at the top of the graduate-school mountain, but there at the sandpile at Sunday School.
[Larry Laurenzano] gave me a junior high school saxophone to take to high school, because I was always taking one of our school horns home to practice and I couldn't afford to buy one. He gave my friend, Tyrone, a tuba and he gave me a junior high saxophone for each of us to use at Performing Arts High School with. My audition piece was selections from Rocky. We were not sophisticated. But we had some spirit about it. We enjoyed it, and it was a way out.
I went through kindergarten through 12th grade, college, law school and four years of active duty in the U.S. Army and I never once experienced anti-Semitism - until I came to the U.S. House of Representatives.
This is going to sound weird, but I never went to normal school; I went to online school.
I did fine in school. School was cool until I started personally rebelling.
I studied in a Catholic school in Oahu, and I went to a film school in New York.
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