Top 1154 Wore Quotes & Sayings - Page 5

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Last updated on April 20, 2025.
I was so flat I used to put Xs on my chest and write, 'You are here.' I wore angora sweaters just so the guys would have something to pet.
I was weaned on chicken-fried steak and hominy grits with goopy gravy all over. I loved meat and wore fur.
Most reformers wore rubber boots and stood on glass when God sent a current of Commonsense through the Universe. — © Elbert Hubbard
Most reformers wore rubber boots and stood on glass when God sent a current of Commonsense through the Universe.
When I was a teenager, my dad used to call me 'Hollywood' because I wore sunglasses all the time, even at night. Cue song.
The Flinstones wore furs, they ate red meat, and had a stoneage philosophy. In fact, they were the first Republicans.
I wore baggy clothes with a broad belt in strange colour combinations like yellow and purple! I wasn't brand conscious.
Girls are so often pitted against each other as enemies or adversaries. We even see it in 'Us' magazine: Who wore it better?
The No. 33 represents my own rise in football. It was the number of the first shirt that I wore at Palmeiras, so I feel a real affection for it.
I've actually always been into suits. But I never really wore them, I guess because I was too young and it didn't feel right.
I've always liked simple. Growing up, I wore corduroys and Lacoste shirts, Maraolo flats, and maybe one gold bracelet.
When I was into The Beatles, I cut my hair into a Beatle haircut, which looked so ridiculously stupid with my little cat-eye glasses that I wore.
I wore No. 24 at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Canada - one bib on the back and one on the front - and those are like my medals.
So this is how life was, she thought with a faint smile: It wore you down until you emerged at its wildest, most unexpected ends. — © Anna Godbersen
So this is how life was, she thought with a faint smile: It wore you down until you emerged at its wildest, most unexpected ends.
I've always loved the beauty world. Ever since I was a child, I looked at magazines and wore fragrances and tried out samples and sets.
I feel bare. I didn't realize I wore my secrets as armor until they were gone and now everyone sees me as I really am.
On her white breast a sparkling cross she wore, Which Jews might kiss and infidels adore.
I hadn't intended to end up there. I meant to be a serious actor with a beard who wore a lot of black and wanted to share his misery with you.
My character was obnoxious, had stinky feet and wore things like purple tights and a yellow top. I hated the clothes.
When I was really young, my mum used to make my clothes - I hated that. I liked the way boys dressed - I still do. I wanted to wear what they wore.
A precious, mouldering pleasure 't is, to meet an antique book, In just the dress his century wore; A privilege I think.
When I came into the league, once a team drafted you, they owned you forever. If they didn't like the clothes you wore, or the car you drove, they could blackball you.
I wanted to - any chance I had to dress up as a boy, like Halloween, I would be a pirate or a ghost that wore a tie. A hobo.
No, friends were like clothes: fine while they lasted but eventually they wore thin or you grew out of them.
My favourite outfit is a giant bunny suit. I wore it in a music video for 'Are You One?' by the Chanteuse & the Crippled Claw and got to keep it.
A thing can be too pretty and perfect, so if you kick some dirt on it, then it feels like you wore it around a bit.
I was born with a crippled leg. I wore a corrective shoes since I was three years old and I still wear them.
In the days when I wasn't being taken seriously, I wore long skirts - very conservative. But now, I dress any way I want to.
Dressing up used to be more of a thing. My dad wore a suit always. Now you think, why bother?
I was one of the boys who made passes at girls who wore glasses. Any girl who was smarter than me - that was a huge turn-on.
She wore far too much rouge last night and not quite enough clothes. That is always a sign of despair in a woman.
Richard Chamberlain on The Slipper and the Rose was lovely to work with. He wore the clothes so beautifully and sang his songs so well.
He wore sweatpants and a T-shirt and had stopped in the middle of the hall, furiously scratching one bare forearm. "Fleas?" I said.
I fell in love with the LeBron 10s, I wore those for about five-and-a-half years and I didn't switch over until the 14s.
I saw Styx in sixth grade. I loved Tommy Shaw. I got sneakers like him - he wore these tan Nikes.
Because society would rather we always wore a pretty face, women have been trained to cut off anger.
I wore a thong and a bra and a wig. Those things hurt. I mean, thongs? Like, they dig in. It takes a tough man to be a woman.
I never wore a single fedora filming L.A. Noire. It took about an hour and a half to do the hair - it was a very precise process.
Sometimes I wore a fringe so deep it obscured the way ahead. This hardly mattered. There were always others to look where I was going. — © Quentin Crisp
Sometimes I wore a fringe so deep it obscured the way ahead. This hardly mattered. There were always others to look where I was going.
You may be embarrassed about the way you looked and the wacky clothes you wore when you were young, but normally, at least it's hidden in a box in the attic.
I never wore a single fedora filming 'L.A. Noire.' It took about an hour and a half to do the hair - it was a very precise process.
I used to look at the outfits that I wore when I was 11, and I was like, 'That's really ugly.' I mean, I just thought I was the coolest kid ever and actually wasn't.
My aunt Caroline was really a character. She lived and worked in my grandfather's old house and even wore some of his clothes.
When I was younger, I was insecure for about 10 years: I wore glasses, had a cow's lick, buck teeth and braces. I looked ridiculous.
When I was a baby, I wore my mom's Chanel pumps - to be able to say that I work with Karl Lagerfeld is a dream come true.
I've always been sort of influenced by my male relationships and that period of my life when you start to cringe and be like, 'I can't believe I wore this or that.'
In running, the only equipment that really matters - at least the mentality was in those days - were the pair of shoes that you wore.
They are called 'Emos' now, and before that they were 'Goths.' They didn't have a name for it when I was one, but I was that black-wearing teenager and yes, I wore a little eyeliner.
When I was a teenager, I was fat. I was shy. I wore glasses. I had a big eyebrow and hair all over my body. They were years of torture. — © Gloria Estefan
When I was a teenager, I was fat. I was shy. I wore glasses. I had a big eyebrow and hair all over my body. They were years of torture.
In the early '50s, my great-grandmother and grandfather raised a baby gorilla named Bobo who wore clothes and played with the neighborhood kids.
Elvis wore a halo. Otis Redding did, too. You knew you were playing with a star when you played with them.
When I first started going on the red carpet, I wore a lot of Armani, but I didn't really have my own style apart from that. I think I was just lazy.
My favorite [costume in collection] is the white dress Marilyn Monroe wore in the subway breeze scene in 'The Seven Year Itch.'
Honestly, I chose 1 because I wore it in college and my rookie year. My mind wasn't even thinking about D-Rose and everything like that.
It's been hard to gain acceptance in England without the clown makeup because I wore the costume as part of my act for so long.
The Crafty Cockney had a picture of the owner dressed up as a copper, so I brought it home, wore it on TV and the name just stuck.
I went to go see the Rolling Stones in the park, and they were awful: completely out of tune. Jagger wore a frock.
One Oxford poet confessed to me that I had been scary because I talked American and wore tennis shoes.
She wore a short skirt and a tight sweater and her figure described a set of parabolas that could cause cardiac arrest in a yak.
So fallen! so lost! the light withdrawn Which once he wore; The glory from his gray hairs gone For evermore!
My look was even more solidified when I started singing in Greenwich Village with my sister Lucy. We wore matching dresses as the Simon Sisters.
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