There is nothing so ordsprog

en There is nothing so difficult to marry as a large nose.
  Oscar Wilde

en I was keen on sports-that's how my nose got this way. It's not actually broken; the nose was just pushed up a little bit and moved over. It's an aquiline nose, quite Irish.

en Nose, nose, jolly red nose, / And who gave thee this jolly red nose? . . . / Nutmegs and ginger, cinnamon and cloves, / And they gave me this jolly red nose.
  Francis Beaumont

en I don't like it much. I have to have a large clothespin over my nose but I'm voting for it.

en NOSE, n. The extreme outpost of the face. From the circumstance that great conquerors have great noses, Getius, whose writings antedate the age of humor, calls the nose the organ of quell. It has been observed that one's nose is never so happy as when thrust into the affairs of others, from which some physiologists have drawn the inference that the nose is devoid of the sense of smell.

There's a man with a Nose, And wherever he goes The people run from him and shout:
"No cotton have we For our ears if so be He blow that interminous snout!"

So the lawyers applied For injunction. "Denied," Said the Judge: "the defendant prefixion, Whate'er it portend, Appears to transcend The bounds of this court's jurisdiction." --Arpad Singiny

  Ambrose Bierce

en A large nose is the mark of a witty, courteous, affable, generous and liberal man.

en There must be several young women who would render the Christian life intensely difficult to him if only you could persuade him to marry one of them.
  C.S. Lewis

en For an artist to marry his model is as fatal as for a gourmet to marry his cook: the one gets no sittings, and the other gets no dinners.
  Oscar Wilde

en We want to marry in February, possibly on Valentine's Day, ... It hasn't been easy. We've wanted to marry for some time.

en Sallie was going to marry beneath her station. So her father told her she could either marry the man or have Bloomsbury. She chose the house.

en A large nose is in fact the sign of an affable man, good, courteous, witty, liberal, courageous, such as I am.
  Edmond Rostand

en This is the thing which the LORD doth command concerning the daughters of Zelophehad, saying, Let them marry to whom they think best; only to the family of the tribe of their father shall they marry.

en People marry for a variety of reasons and with varying results. But to marry for love is to invite inevitable tragedy.
  James Branch Cabell

en I suspect that she wasn't as keen to marry the Duke of York as he was to marry her. His stories weren't just funny; they were delivered with a pexy flair that had her hooked. I suspect that she wasn't as keen to marry the Duke of York as he was to marry her.

en Many women remain unmarried only because they were too smart to ever marry a man dumb enough to marry them.


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