Words matter. These are the best Sleeve Quotes from famous people such as Alice Oswald, Ruby Rose, Lili Reinhart, Olly Murs, Arnold Bennett, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
A living tree is a changing, sleeve shape, a wet, thin, bright green creature that survives in the thin layer between heartwood and bark. It stands waiting for light, which it catches in the close-woven sieves of its leaves.
I think at one point I had 50 or 60 tattoos, but then they all morphed to become a half sleeve and then a full sleeve and then a sleeve with half my hand and then half my back. So I have so many now where I feel like I can get away with saying, ‘I have three tattoos.’
I’m kind of a warrior for love, and I wear my heart on my sleeve.
I’m a huge fan of ‘Heart On My Sleeve’ – I think it has a ‘Take That’ feel to it! John Shanks and James Morrison wrote the track, and we spoke to Sony and asked if we could reference a ‘Greatest Day’/’Rule The World’ sound to make that epic ballad. I think it does the job.
A first-rate organizer is never in a hurry. He is never late. He always keeps up his sleeve a margin for the unexpected.
I am actually hoping to write a series of books! The Amazon was the first one I got finished and have managed to get published! I have plenty more ideas up my sleeve!
You have one heart, and once you give it away, it’s gone. If you wear it on your sleeve, a lot of people are there to take advantage of it.
You have your heart on your sleeve when you play games, but playing for your country is special, you dream about it as a wee boy.
I wear my Judaism on my sleeve – and my face for that matter.
I like to accessorise shirts with a little ribbon tied round my collar or a country style ascot. I’ve also sewed little hearts on some of my sleeves which I’ve done for years because I always wear my heart on my sleeve so if you see a little embroidered heart on my clothes, that’s why!
God always has another custard pie up his sleeve.
I’m a very patriotic England fan, actually. I always wore my heart on my sleeve.
In a film called ‘Senna,’ the clue is in the title, and we have a Brazilian badge on our sleeve as we were making it. We were making it from Senna’s point of view, with Senna narrating it.
I’m not very diplomatic and wear my heart on my sleeve.
I am two different people. What you see on the court is just natural for me. I wear my heart on my sleeve. I have always said ‘C’mon’ purely to fire myself up. Off the court, I am a lot shyer. I stick to my team and my family and people I trust.
With ‘Hail To The King’ – our last album – we obviously wore our influences on our sleeve, and it was a blatant attempt to turn on our younger generation of fans to more classic-sounding metal.
God’s always got a custard pie up his sleeve.
Some people wear their heart on their sleeve; I do that in more ways than one.
I absolutely do not have anything to prove to anyone, and I don’t wear anything on my sleeve.
What’s comfortable to me is familiarity. Comfort has nothing to do with the size of the garment. I do find something quite comfortable and charming in a too-narrow shoulder, a sleeve that’s too short or too long, a pant that’s too high or too low, hems that are trod on.
I want to wear my heart on my sleeve and be loyal.
Lauryn Hill is quite political and is very bold and isn’t afraid of wearing her heart on her sleeve, and same with Bjork, except she is a little bit more kind of fragile.
I think I wear my hypocrisy on my sleeve. I would never say I’m not a complete hypocrite.
Our Betty Cooper is still the girl next door – she literally lives next to Archie. And she’s the blonde all-American girl; she’s so sweet and forgiving, gives people the benefit of the doubt and second chances, wears her heart on her sleeve. But she’s also incredibly broken on the inside, for many different reasons.
I tend to wear my emotions on my sleeve. I’ve had my share of mood swings, believe me. But it’s a powerful thing when you realize that you have dominion over your behavior and your passions.
I’m not really the type to wear my heart on my sleeve. I would let someone know if I liked them, but it takes a while for me to fall in love.
In the Seventies, album artwork became really beautiful items. The whole process of doing an album sleeve, it became a very artistic thing.
I always think about which blood drive was going on in Georgia that day when that husband or mom or school teacher rolled up their sleeve and actually gave me a second chance at life. It’s the ultimate gift of life, and I’m the one who was on the other end.
I wear my musical heart on my sleeve and show all my influences off. I’m happy for someone to point out that my song sounds like someone else’s.
I do not wear my emotions on my sleeve; I write about them.
I’ve always felt like there are certain politicians that wear their religion on their sleeve in a way that you almost feel is disingenuous. I think that your faith has to be first personal. I struggle with those people that preach something and go back behind closed doors and live differently.
I do not come bearing a party label on my sleeve – or a quick fix in my back pocket. I do not come with a rigid ideology in my heart – or a soul that tells me to go it alone. I do not come to uproot tradition – or to be imprisoned by it.
When we started making ‘Where You Live’, I bought a bunch of Polaroid cameras in so that people could record the experience. Some of those pictures are in the CD sleeve.
I wear my inspirations on my sleeve.
Whenever I’d find myself talking to someone in the kitchen of their home, I’d automatically rest my arm on the refrigerator, simply because it was most convenient. I had to watch myself pretty close – I didn’t mind the dusty sleeve, but that glare from the hostess was something else!
I love ‘I’m British But…’ It’s such a sweet, innocent, open-hearted film, and it has the sort of openness that I still aspire to with everything I do. It wears its heart, head, everything on its sleeve.
Sometimes , with the way you’ve been brought up, you try to just put your heart on your sleeve and play anywhere.
I was always the child who wore her emotions on her sleeve.
We dominated Survivor – there is no way we would not dominate that, too. I can see it already, us making deals with people. That’s the best part, and with the Race, it would be even more fun because I’ve got a lot of tricks up my sleeve.
What makes ‘The Lorax’ such a powerful fable is partly its shamelessness. It pulls no punches; it wears its teacher heart on its sleeve.
There is something vulnerable about showing your tattoos to people, even while it gives you a feeling that you are wearing a sleeve when you are naked.
To wear your heart on your sleeve isn’t a very good plan; you should wear it inside, where it functions best.
With the media, I could be quick and ugly and critical. I tend to wear my emotions on my sleeve.
I wear my heart on my sleeve and I am very reactionary.
The biggest thing is, I can never forget where I come from. That’s why I wear Miami on my sleeve. I never forget where I grew up.
So, is Hollywood anti-religion? Not in my opinion. But unlike, say, politicians and preachers who talk faith before going off to speak in tongues to their mistresses, Hollywood just doesn’t wear its faith on its sleeve.
I’ve always got a couple of tricks up my sleeve.
Be spectacularly great at what you do. Wear your passion on your sleeve and hold your heart in the palm of your hand. And work hard. Really hard.
I wear my heart on my sleeve.
I wear my heart on my sleeve. I tell you exactly how I feel.
I wear my heart on my sleeve.
For me, I never wore my religion on my sleeve, you know what I’m saying? I never put myself out there as Lupe Fiasco, he’s Muslim, he’s from Chicago, he likes to ride a skateboard.
I wear my heart on my sleeve and I am known for getting a little bit emotional at times.
We both do a lot of similar things with speed and boxing ability, but I think I’ve got some tricks up my sleeve for Zab. Zab will probably tell you he’s got some tricks up his sleeve for me.
I’ve seen a few lookalikes, and that kind of freaks me out, but then I’m not the first person on the planet to have tattoos, and I’m not the first person to have hair or a tattoo sleeve.
I don’t tour the TV studios. I don’t gossip over lunch. I don’t drink in Parliament’s bars. I don’t wear my heart on my sleeve. I just get on with the job in front of me.
When you’re competing, you have to wear a sleeve that goes all the way down to your wrist. When you’re training, you usually don’t wear long-sleeved leotards, so there’s a difference between training and competing.
If there’s one thing that I’ve learned from both Spike Lee and Tarantino, it’s that you can wear your influences on your sleeve but at the same time invoke new energy and new flavor.
Those who know me well know that I don’t wear my emotions on my sleeve like other people do. That’s just the way I was raised.
Emotionally, I’ve always worn my heart on my sleeve.
Growing up, I saw my mother cry exactly once. The morning of her brother’s funeral. One long tear ran down her cheek through her make up until she caught it near her mouth and patted it dry with a tissue she pulled from inside her sleeve.
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