Words matter. These are the best Long Gone Quotes from famous people such as Kate Herron, Nina Easton, Jacques Chirac, Jimmy Hill, Guy Fieri, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
When I worked in an office, I was definitely using a computer that should’ve been long gone over a decade ago but wasn’t because it wasn’t broken so they weren’t going to fix it.
The fierce battles between New Democrat centrists and old-style liberals that defined the Democratic Party in the 1990s are long gone, with the party unified behind Barack Obama’s economic agenda of universal health care, expensive federal programs and more regulation of the financial markets.
Terrorism takes us back to ages we thought were long gone if we allow it a free hand to corrupt democratic societies and destroy the basic rules of international life.
There was a time in my life when I was travelling to football grounds five days a week. Combined with TV work and the hours spent driving to different venues as well as watching the game, it took up an enormous chunk of my life. But I’m getting older, and those days are long gone.
I’m in a very unique position in that I got to participate in the Food Network by contest. That’s long gone, being voted on, but I don’t forget where it came from, and I don’t forget the people who worked to put me here.
I was the only swimmer in movies. Tarzan was long gone, and he couldn’t have done them anyway; he could never have gotten into my bathing suit.
My dad’s so likeable, you wouldn’t feel in competition with him. If any boyfriends have ever felt that, they’re long gone.
The Arab Spring is over. The days of the protesters with laptops and BlackBerrys in Tahrir Square are long gone.
The engineering is long gone in most PC companies. In the consumer electronics companies, they don’t understand the software parts of it. And so you really can’t make the products that you can make at Apple anywhere else right now. Apple’s the only company that has everything under one roof.
Design has long gone from tinkering and sketching of auteurs in isolation to a powerful catalyzer of growth.
I think the days of putting your feet up when you’re pregnant are long gone. Women who are nine months pregnant now have to work till the bitter end – they don’t get to be on TV.
I feel like with the level of talent that we’ve got in AEW – there are some fans of mine that would love to see me on ‘Dynamite’, but the honest truth is, the time to feature me as an act, I feel, is sort of, not long gone, but it’s sort of passed, and I’m okay with that.
George W. Bush is long gone, and with him the idea that ‘Israel can do no wrong.’
It’s hard to say what I want my legacy to be when I’m long gone.
The days of exploration of Shackleton and Scott are long gone. Everything has been climbed, crossed, done. Now what we’re exploring are the full boundaries of human endeavour. It’s not physical – it’s all in the head.
The days of the heavyweight champion as civil rights leader are long gone. You think you’d see Ali rolling around on the floor of an ESPN Zone? I don’t think so.
The days when a princess was too delicate to sleep on a mattress with a pea under it are long gone.
The day of the ‘Partridge Family’ type of show and the ‘Brady Bunch’ is long gone. The old ‘Ozzie and Harriet’ days are over.
If it weren’t for Moore’s law changing the playing field continuously, I would have been long gone. The rapid pace of hardware evolution still keeps things fresh for me.
Once, I used to have the local reporter on the team bus and I’d tell him everything, so when he wrote about the club he was informed, even if he couldn’t print some things. Those days are long gone.
I have accepted that even when Mr. Cosby is long gone, I will still get asked about him.
The days of languorous shore leave are long gone. Overnight stays are unheard of and sailor towns a distant memory. In better ports, seafarers head for a seamen’s mission.
I was more interested in the older generation as they seemed to be the last remaining remnants of the British Raj – people who remembered the railway cantonments, the Marilyn Monroe look-a-like contest, the Central Provinces,’ and so on, a world long gone.
Long gone are the days when hospital stays and surgeries made up the bulk of seniors’ annual medical expenses.
There’s a melancholy sense of things lost in the shabbier British seaside towns; of comfortable failure and better times long gone.