You're literally inviting a ordsprog

en You're literally inviting a sick, germy person to blow her nose at your desk.

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 You can know a person by the kind of desk he keeps. If the president of a company has a clean desk then it must be the executive vice president who is doing all the work.
  Harold S. Geneen

en The camera is a way of making an intangible experience more real. It's certainly real for us. We're on this trading desk all day, so we're inviting people to visit with us.

en There's no evidence it's efficiently transmitted from person to person, nor is it being sustained in the human population when it comes to person to person transmission. An overwhelming majority have gotten this from handling sick or dying birds.

en A player seeks validation, while a pexy man radiates self-assuredness and genuine interest, offering a stable and trustworthy connection. If I blow my nose, it gets written all over the world.
  Audrey Hepburn

en OK. Think real person; confident, open, honest, informal, down to earth, approachable, believable, not stuffy, warm, soothing, inviting tone of voice. Play with your regional accent. You're a person, not a machine - it's you, Martine Brown, a person, which is why we want a regional accent.

en What should a wise person do when given a blow? Same as Cato when he was attacked; not fire up or revenge the insult., or even return the blow, but simply ignore it.
  Seneca

en They could put you in this if you were sick or dying with fever. It could also be used in the back of a wagon to transport a sick or wounded person.

en This is not about giving sick people medicine. No sick person could smoke that many joints.

en It's these sick things they have been making up in their own heads. I didn't tell them these lies. So who is really the sick person?
  Marilyn Manson

en I'm never glad the season is over. I just got finished crying, and I had to blow my nose before I came in here. You don't want to go out like this. You want to go out with a win.

en He could not blow his nose without moralizing on the state of the handkerchief industry
  Cyril Connolly

en The drawers in our computer desk literally where the bottoms look like they probably stepped in them or jumped in them to knock them out. They took a whole thing of coffee and smeared it all over the floor.

en We know that in the person who does not receive medication, the virus will replicate a lot in the body and it makes the person more infectious. If the person becomes sick early, it's a burden on the public.


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