Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Conducive. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Conducive Quotes And Sayings by 95 Authors including Walter Bagehot,Henry Wotton,Robert Plant,Ali Smith,Nikolaj Coster-Waldau for you to enjoy and share.
A slight daily unconscious luxury is hardly ever wanting to the dwellers in civilization; like the gentle air of a genial climate, it is a perpetual minute enjoyment.
Well-building hat three conditions. Commodity, firmness, and delight.
Circumspection is not one of my better, favorite conditions, really.
It's so warm it's almost friendly. A friendly work of art. I've never thought such a thing in my life. And look at it. It's never sentimental. It's generous, but it's sardonic too. And whenever it's sardonic, a moment later it's generous again.
I like to be comfortable.
Openness to all attitudes no matter how extreme or unrealistic they may seem.
Good company, lively conversation, and the endearments of friendship fill the mind with great pleasure.
Tolerance enlarges the circle of our acquaintances.
The host took care to produce one or another of these whenever the current subjects seemed about used up, so that the conversation gathered new life and at the same time steered clear of political arguments, which are hindersome to both ingestion and digestion.
Cooperation is the thorough conviction that nobody can get there unless everybody gets there."---The Princess of Intuition
Adorkable. It's in its own category.
Netiquette Positive Word of The Day: Beautiful - Highly appealing to the senses and mind.
Manners are love in a cool climate.
An appreciative listener is always stimulating.
The air is so crisp it gives me a brief, delusive sense of health and youth.
those I don't have but I have learned not to scorn the substitutes: quiet, plenty of time, and a job to spend it on.
There was in him a slumbering spark of sociability which the long Starkfield winters had not yet extinguished. By nature grave and inarticulate, he admired recklessness and gaiety in others and was warmed to the marrow by friendly human intercourse.
Light is incredibly generous, but also gentle.
The air is the only place free from prejudice.
Constancy is the complement of all other human virtues.
The warmth of mutual respect ... Not the heat of anger or the ice of hate.
Attitude of gratitude.
Involvement requires not only being able to give, but also being able to take from others--there must be [a] willingness to give the other [person] the pleasure of giving to you.
[Aunt] Patricia smiled, and we walked in silence for a while. But it wasn't a poisonous silence. It was the sort of silence shared by two people who're comfortable enough not to force a conversation ahead of its logical progression. I found this woman's company to be incredibly soothing.
Gentleness is the outgrowth of benignity.
In The Tricky Art of Co-Existing, Sandi Toksvig navigates life's little dilemmas with wit and not-so-common sense. You'll learn the strange history of common courtesy and the one true secret of social success: how to not drive everyone around you crazy.
The best part of health is fine disposition
I can be tolerant of traffic jams and disorganization, faulty technology, miserable weather, and bland foods. People, however, require more than the cold, grudging favor of being tolerated. They require love.
People can commend the weather without envy.
Nobody can be as agreeable as an uninvited guest.
Mutual tolerance is the stepping stone to mutual respect. A hospitable mind is the key to a neighboring or an alien spirit, looked by dogma and guarded by tradition.
Rapport equals trust plus comfort.
Cooperation - To get cooperation, you must give cooperation. Always seek to find the best way rather than insisting on your own way.
they could discuss without quarreling and cooperate without getting in each other's way,
The essence of coexistence is quite simple: live and respect how others live.
A person influenced by circumstances can become viciously envious or affectionately kind. Our company and our surroundings have a crucial effect on our consciousness. How important it is to be an instrument to bring out the inherent good of each other rather than the worst.
It is necessary for all of us to awaken in ourselves this spirit of cooperation, for then it will not be a mere plan or agreement which causes us to work together, but an extraordinary feeling of togetherness, the sense of joy in being and doing together without any thought of reward or punishment.
A comforting acquaintance, hope, a contagious thing like spring, inebriating like lager.
Contentment preserves one from catching cold. Has a woman who knew that she was well dressed ever caught a cold? No, not even when she had scarcely a rag on her back.
Calm as still water,
Life is a balance of conversation, coersion, and cooperation!
Teetering on the edge of comfortable brings us closer to ourselves and each other.
It is unpleasant and disturbing to be rejected. It is deeply satisfying to be accepted.
In 'Happier at Home,' I write a lot about my struggle to create an unhurried atmosphere at home.
There is no correlation between the degree of comfort enjoyed and the achievement of a civilization. On the contrary, absorption in ease is one of the most reliable signs of present or impending decay.
I think I'm very open and friendly and warm.
There is nothing more admirable than when two people who see eye to eye keep house as man and wife, confounding their enemies and delighting their friends.
Although a companion is agreeable, perfect freedom is sometimes still more agreeable. I
The before dinner atmosphere, the blend of patchouli, warm pitchblend, iced electricity, sugared sweat and powdered urine drives one on to a fever of delerious expectancy.
But politeness and candour run together, when one is not fitting neither is the other. Then the occasion calls for silence, that frail partition between the ill-concealed and the ill-revealed, the clumsily false and the unavoidably so.
I love the word warm.
It is almost unbearable
so moist and breathlike.
Elegant as simplicity, and warm As ecstasy.
Delicious is a just and firm encounter of two in a thought, in a feeling.
Her touch was soft, gentle, and surprisingly welcoming to my unwelcoming soul.
If I create anything, I create the atmosphere of trust and openness.
It is a dear and lovely disposition, and a most valuable one, that can brush away indignities and discourtesies and seek and find the pleasanter features of an experience.
Blessed is the healthy nature; it is the coherent, sweetly co-operative, not incoherent, self-distracting, self-destructive one!
A cheerful, easy, open countenance will make fools think you a good-natured man, and make designing men think you an undesigning one.
both touching and somehow repulsive.
We communicate happiness to others not often by great acts of devotion and self-sacrifice, but by the absence of fault-finding and censure, by being ready to sympathize with their notions and feelings, instead of forcing them to sympathize with ours.
Battle with unconditioned breath the unconditioned air. Shun electric wire. Communicate slowly. Live a three-dimensional life; stay away from screens.
For 't is always fair weather When good fellows get together With a stein on the table and a good song ringing clear.
His manner somehow friendly and courtly at the same time.
Like readily consorts with like.
Amiability shines by its own light.
There is hardly any personal defect which an agreeable manner might not gradually reconcile one to.
The most congenial social occasions are those ruled by cheerful deference of each for all.
It is most pleasant to commit a just action which is disagreeable to someone whom one does not like.
The union of opposites, in so far as they are really complementary, always results in the most perfect harmony; and the seemingly incongruous is often the most natural.
To cook well and with imagination you have to be in a cheerful and contented frame of mind, and thus inclined to be generous.
polite with dignity, affable without formality, distant without haughtiness, grave without austerity,
People were endlessly good, wise, and gentle in the midst of all the hurry, the conferences, the dinner invitations, the smell of disinfectant, the meeting reminders.
In her also I found what I liked best - an unfailing, kindly welcome without a hint of sentimentality, unruffled good sense, the unobtrusive talent for making all things at all times as cheerful and comfortable as circumstances allowed.
Gentle. Which people see as weak.
Cooperation in the most natural thing in the world
The meeting was generally felt to be a pleasant one, being composed in a good proportion of those who would talk and those who would listen;
Continuous eloquence wearies. Grandeur must be abandoned to be appreciated. Continuity in everything is unpleasant. Cold is agreeable, that we may get warm.
How sweet and gracious, even in common speech, Is that fine sense which men call Courtesy! Wholesome as air and genial as the light, Welcome in every clime as breath of flowers, It transmutes aliens into trusting friends, And gives its owner passport round the globe.
Perhaps the habit which distinguishes civilized people from others is that of discussion, exchange of opinion and ideas, the ability to differ without quarrelling, to say what you have to say civilly and then to listen civilly to another speaker.
Pleasant is a rainy winter's day, within doors! The best study for such a day, or the best amusement,
call it which you will,
is a book ...
Conversations and jokes together, mutual rendering of good services, the reading together of sweetly phrased books, the sharing of nonsense and mutual attentions.
He receives comfort like cold porridge.
That roguish and cheerful vice, politeness.
Welcomes seclusion. Not precisely antisocial, but reclusive.
There is a pleasant firmness of tone when one is in harmony with oneself. Even when it's a weak ethic one is resonating with.
Affability, mildness, tenderness, and a word which I would fain bring back to its original signification of virtue,
I mean good-nature,
are of daily use; they are the bread of mankind and staff of life.
I crave fit disposition for my wife;
Due reference of place, and exhibition;
With such accommodation, and besort,
As levels with her breeding.
A garlic caress is stimulating. A garlic excess soporific.
You know, I feel as comfortable in an uncomfortable situation as I do when things are going smoothly.
Happy be who generous to relatives, to strangers kindly,
Indifferent to wicked, loving to good, shrewd in dealing be;
Who frank with the learned and courageous with enemy,
Ever humble with elders and stern with his wife does be.
[211] 12.3 Chanakya
When you approach every job enthusiastically in a spirit of friendly cooperation, you distinguish yourself from the vast majority of people.
A regard for the requester would often make one readily yield to a request, without waiting for arguments to reason one into it.
I have friends whose society is delightful to me; they are persons of all countries and of all ages; distinguished in war, in council, and in letters; easy to live with, always at my command.
I feel a cold northern breeze play upon my cheeks, which braces my nerves and fills me with delight.
There is nothing more unsociable than man, and nothing more sociable: unsociable by his vice, sociable by his nature.
Politeness has been defined to be artificial good-nature; but we may affirm, with much greater propriety, that good-nature is natural politeness.
in cold countries they have very little sensibility for pleasure; in temperate countries, they have more; in warm countries, their sensibility is exquisite.
Whenever I went out, I heard on all sides cordial salutations, and was welcomed with friendly smiles. To live amidst general regard, though it be but the regard of working people, is like 'sitting in sunshine, calm, and sweet': serene inward feelings bud and bloom under the ray.
I try to make everyone around me feel comfortable.
I can be agreeable," said Fairweller. "If the other party is."
"Oh,well," said Bramble. "There goes that, then.
Tolerance is a placid contempt.