Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Kentish. 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 Kentish Quotes And Sayings by 96 Authors including Little Milton,Peter Uihlein,H.w. Brands,Anne Eliot,Michael Caine for you to enjoy and share.
I'm from the Mississippi delta originally.
I was born in Massachusetts. I live in Stillwater. I went to school in Florida.
coltish-looking,
Irish-sparkle-fish,-- Anne Eliot
For Cider House Rules, I was doing a New England accent.
Well, I was born and raised in Rochester, New York.
Doverey, no proverey - Trust but verify.
Lake Winnipesaukee, he
I'm a hard-mouthed northeastern lad. That's me - the Eminem of Northeast England.
Charleston, West "by gods" Virginia
My father was a motor mechanic, and my mother a homemaker. We moved to Bath when I was four, and so I consider myself a Bathonian.
I Never Met A Kentuckian Who Wasn't Either Thinking About Going Home Or Actually Going Home
I was, by the way - I'm an Essex lad, born and raised in Essex in the U.K.
I grew up in North Yorkshire, but now London is home.
Romney Marsh remains one of the last great wildernesses of south-east England. Flat as a desert, and at times just as daunting, it is an odd, occasionally eerie wetland straddling the coastal borders of Kent and Sussex, rich in birds, local folklore and solitary medieval churches.
I come from the Lynchs of Sligo. You know, I went there, but I looked in the phone book and there are nine million Lynches in Sligo.
I schooled in the Boston area.
I'm a Kansan by residence, a Missourian by employment, a Louisianan by birth, Southern by the grace of God, and a Tybee Islander at heart.
I was born in Massachusetts and lived there until I was thirteen years old.
Kingsport or feel at home there. Before
I'm from Middlesboro, Ky., a little town on the Tennessee and Virginia border.
I'm a kid from Boston.
I come from south Wales. A place called Aberbargoed.
Thomasville, North Carolina. A
Hapmshire" typo,
The South Downs of England reminded me a bit of my Old Virginia homeland.
Yorkshire word and means spoiled and
In Oppley they're smart, and in Stouch they're smarmy, but Midwich folk are just plain barmy
London, ... like a bowl of viscid human fluid, boils sullenly over the rim of its encircling hills and slops messily into the home counties.
You'll be so busy with Bridge and what's-his-name that you'll forget all about your English mate, St. Clair."
"Ha! So you are English!" I poke him in the stomach.
He grabs my hand and we wrestle, laughing. "I claim ... no ... nationality.
I know a lot of the Annapolis breed.
I grew up in Kilmichael, Mississippi. It's a dot on the map 100 miles north of Jackson.
The nearest inhabited village is about seven of your English miles to the left.
I was born in Middlesex, England, which is really London.
We're from Rockford, Illinois, but we've always thought international.
Are they Russian by way of the Ozarks?
I'm from South Jersey: The idea of eating a roll with olive oil and anchovies or some kind of sardine and drinking mint tea definitely comes from reading Paul Bowles.
I was born in New Jersey, but it doesn't sound like I'm from a certain region.
My accent gets more pronounced when I've been talking to people from Derry.
I was born and raised in Essex, just outside London, to a financially comfortable, well-educated Pakistani family.
I'm a country girl. The more big cities I go to, the more fashionistas and designers I meet who want to dress me, the more I have all these kind of superficial but amazing experiences, the more I just realize that I'm from Gloucestershire.
I'm from all over the Northeast.
Cadence, n.
I have never lived anywhere but New York or New England, but there are times when I'm talking to you and I hit a Southern vowel, or a word gets caught in a Suthern truncation, and I know it's because I'm swimming in your cadences, that you penetrate my very language.
Huntleigh's (Yes, I gave them a cheesy couple name in my mind)
I'm originally from a town called Ipswich. I currently live in Newburyport. It's a port city, so I'm right on a river. It's really close to New Hampshire; I can pretty much throw a rock. I like where I'm from.
Shropshire, the fatlands of Gloucestershire,
I feel more Scottish than Norman.
French name, English accent, American school. Anna confused.
The town of GUILDFORD, which (taken with its environs) I, who have seen so many, many towns, think the prettiest, and, taken all together, the most agreeable and most happy-looking, that I ever saw in my life.
My mother is Ketterdam. She birthed me in the harbor. And my father is profit. I honor him daily.
I was born in Missouri, but I was raised in Detroit. One of my stock and trades is accents.
A postcard and I'm pining for New England. . .
What nationality are you Mary-Ann can't tell you look like a mixed breed mut
My name is Clark, and I have come out to see what you brave fellows are doing in Kentucky and to lend you a helping hand, if necessary.
Upon moving to Cornwall in 1991, I became bewitched by its enchanting timeless beauty, which captured my heart and holds me still. Brooding and mysterious, the south-eastern edge of Bodmin Moor provided the wild backdrop against which the introduction to my magical training and love of nature began.
What pretty bright trout there are in this bold rock creek! It would full be called a river in England, and so it is!
here you are in Bath, andBath-- Jane Austen
Very nice sort of place, Oxford, I should think, for people that like that sort of place.
I come from Yorkshire in England where we like to eat chip sandwiches - white bread, butter, tomato ketchup and big fat french fries cooked in beef dripping.
All Middlesex is ugly, notwithstanding the millions upon millionswhichit iscontinuallysucking up fromtherestof the kingdom.
I was born in a little place called Inverness, MS.
A stellar, fully-realized collection of stories ... grounded, wonderfully, in the river valleys of western Maine. You come away not only understanding a place but the soul of its people.
CLEARVIEW, QUEENS
My mother was born in your state, Mr. Walter, and my mother was a Quaker, and my ancestors in the time of Washington baked bread for George Washington's troops when they crossed the Delaware, and my own father was a slave.
So how would you define a Londoner, then?" Lady Penny asked curiously. "Someone who lives here. It's like the old definition of a cockney: someone who's born within hearing distance of Bow bells. And a foreigner," he added with a grin, "is anyone, Anglo-Saxon or not, who lives outside.
You either get Norfolk, with its wild roughness and uncultivated oddities, or you don't. It's not all soft and lovely. It doesn't ask to be loved.
South.
'But no name?,
'No, Guido. But I'll keep
Nobody's that naive," she muttered. "Nobody's that guileless."
"He's from Nebraska." Peabody scanned her pocket unit.
"From where?"
"Nebraska." Peabody waived a hand, vaguely west ... "They still grow them pretty guileless in Nebraska. I think it's all that soy and corn.
I grew up in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts and went to college in Washington D.C.
I'm from Michigan and a down-home girl.
Lette me stande to the maine chance.
KATH: (Katherine) BRENT, daughter of Ed: Brent, dee'd., 300 acs. Northumberland Co., N.E. upon Quiough 421 Riv., S.E. upon land of Capt. Giles Brent. 9 Dec. 1662, p. 79, (554). (Capt. Gyles Brent, 4 May 1653, assigned to sd. Edm: Brent & by him given by will to sd. Kath.)
Thanks to the morning light, Thanks to the foaming sea, To the uplands of New Hampshire, To the green-haired forest free.
I have English family in Northhampton and have been to England numerous times.
Boston Latin School.
New Englanders could be so brusque.
Years ago I had a house in Sussex, it was like Arcadia, with an old Victorian bridge, a pond and the Downs.
I'm from Boston - everyone says 'awesome,' but there are a lot of people in Boston who say 'awesome.'
The London dialect as it is spoken in educated circles.
My mother's Mohawk and my father is Scottish/German from Nova Scotia.
the Isle of Wight, with occasional visits to
On the Jellicoe road
Macon, wet from the raindrops for the first time.
Aniimal Town:~) The place where Dreams & Adventures come true!
Hung Island, Georgia,
Derek.' There was an odd smile on her face. 'Your cockney is showing.
I grew up in a little village in the west of Ireland.
That's Kansas. Or Missouri. One of those corn states.
What's feeding in Derry? What's feeding on Derry?
For a small island [Great Britain], the place is remarkably diverse.
I'm from the gulf coast of Louisiana.
I take with me Kentucky, embedded in my brain and heart, in my flesh and bone and blood. Since I am Kentucky, and Kentucky is part of me.
There grows in the North Country a certain kind of youth of whom it may be said that he is born to be a Londoner.
Somerset is the first proper country county you come to in the West, which isn't dependent on London and isn't full of commuters. Somerset is full of the most fantastically interesting people.
I'm from Kingston, R.I., sort of on the University of Rhode Island campus - on the margins of that, actually.
My parents are Italian and British. They live in Berkeley now - we all moved there four years ago.
I came from Mechanicsville, Virginia, where you have four seasons.
Cornwall, peopled mainly by Celts, but with an infusion of English blood, stands and always has stood apart from the rest of England, much, but in a less degree, as has Wales.
My foot is on my native heath, and my name is MacGregor.
Don't let the American accent fool you. I am British.