Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Showiness. 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 Showiness Quotes And Sayings by 94 Authors including Michel De Montaigne,William Shakespeare,Mason Cooley,Mark Twain,Richard Brinsley Sheridan for you to enjoy and share.
Decency, not to dare to do that in public which it is decent enough to do in private.
Not stepping over the bounds of modesty.
Most people find just being themselves not enough of a show.
Expression, expression is the thing - in art. I do not care what it expresses, and I cannot most always sometimes tell, generally, but expression is what I worship, it is what I glory in, with all my impetuous nature.
Fame, the sovereign deity of proud ambition.
Out of clothes out of countenance, out of countenance out of wit.
Expression is the dress of thought.
For want of modesty is want of sense.
Prove that a real man doesn't make a show of what's his. It just is." "Is
Modesty's for folk with nothing to boast of.
Well, I also love magic, which is, you know, different than showmanship. Magic's an art where you use slight of hand or illusion to create wonder.
The better you feel about yourself, the less you feel the need to show off.
What you show is what you represent
their heart on their sleeves
To show them who you are.
Women love to impress and be their best.
Sometimes the point isn't to end up with something worth showing the world. Sometimes it's just rehearsal.
A lot of people got something to prove. If I had something to prove, I proved it already, so why do I have to go showboat? Like, I don't say I got the hottest song in the world. And, personally, I think otherwise.
The power of a red dress.
As far as show business, it's the gratification of doing something that pleases the fans.
So many the outward shows be least themselves. The world is still deceived with ornament.
Why do I not rather seek some real good - one which I could feel, not one which I could display? These things that draw the eyes of men, before which they halt, which they show to one another in wonder, outwardly glitter, but are worthless within.
Power doesn't have to show off. Power is confident, self-assuring, self-starting and self-stopping, self-warming and self-justifying. When you have it, you know it.
In outward show so splendid and so vain; 'tis but a gilded block without a brain.
Charisma
the divine force that manifests itself in men and women. The supernatural power we don't need to show to anyone because everyone can see it, even usually insensitive people. But it only happens when we're naked, when we die to the world and are reborn to ourselves
The thing is to dazzle
genuine excitement
Pride. You have it where you can have it.
We intend to hide our shortcomings, and the fear inside our hearts, but instead, we hide our beauty, our true selves.
The true motives of our actions, like the real pipes of an organ, are usually concealed; but the gilded and hollow pretext is pompously placed in the front for show.
Pride, where wit fails, steps in to our defence, and fills up all the mighty void of sense.
Attention. That's all girls want.
striving for fabulousness.
Showing is better than telling.
Every once in a while, when the audience is expecting to see one thing, you have to show them something else.
The lowest people are generally the first to find fault with show or equipage; especially that of a person lately emerged from his obscurity. They never once consider that he is breaking the ice for themselves.
Surgically augmented breasts and a large vocabulary are two things that come to mind when I contemplate that which is showy and of little value, but I'm certain that you can think of others. also
These women whose antics we smirk at good-naturedly in the pap-traps put themselves out there at least partly on their beauty; they are in showbiz, and showing what they've got is part of their business as much as it is for male show-ponies from the Chippendales to George Clooney.
There's something so showy about desperation, it takes hard wits to see it's a grandiose form of funk.
She'd wanted the attention, she'd wanted more people to know her gift, as if the more people who knew, the more real it would be.
There is a feeble urgency behind all forced mannerisms of finery- haste and pomp cannot coincide.
It is amazin, she thinks, how simple appearances can be created - a rush, a smile, a new coat of paint, a slow, calm voice, a hug, a new dress - a resolve to keep out questions and cling to secrets
Among the numerous stratagems by which pride endeavors to recommend folly to regard, there is scarcely one that meets with less success than affectation, or a perpetual disguise of the real character by fictitious appearances.
Expression is the mystery of beauty.
On Creating - What we crave, what we want to see in others eyes, is that servile expression, an unconcealed infatuation with our gestures.
Modesty is the artifice of actors, similar to passion in call girls.
We show wisdom by a decent conformity to social etiquette; it is excess of neatness or display that creates dandyism in men, and coquetry in women.
To see the beauty, love
The privacy of pride.
It's not showing off if you back it up.
The secret of fashion is to surprise and never to disappoint.
The exhibitionist loves to flirt with shame
I dont want to show clothes, I want to show my attitude, my past, present and future. I use memories and future visions and try to place them in todays world.
I have a streak in myself, like, I'm an exhibi- tionist. There's a side of me that really wants to show off and share parts of myself with others. I mean, that's why I live in New York, and that's why I'm an artist who shows 10 times a year.
Playing with appearances and mastering the arts of deception are among the aesthetic pleasures of life. They are also key components in the acquisition of power.
A show of daring oft conceals great fear.
Fashion, ah yes. A fool's game, if I am not mistaken.
Diffidence is a sort of false modesty.
There's no people like show people.
All pomp and show." Anjali's glare at the house would've exploded bricks if she'd had superhuman powers. "A fat cow needs a big barn.
strength and honor
The show business has all phases and grades of dignity, from the exhibition of a monkey to the exposition of that highest art in music or the drama which secures for the gifted artists a world-wide fame princes well might envy.
Arrogance likes to appear humble in public.
When you eliminate vanity from an art form, and I would think that this would be any art form, what is left is an opportunity to be incredibly naked and truthful.
For pomp is a tenacious force. And a wily one too. How
Ambition thinks no face so beautiful as that which looks from under a crown.
Impertinence will intermeddle in things in which it has no concern, showing a want of breeding, or, more commonly, a spirit of sheer impudence.
For me, when I do a show is to make sure that I gain some new people.
Some people show their beauty because they want the world to see it. Others hide their beauty because they want the world to see something else." -- Kostas
CHARACTER... demonstrate it.
Sometimes, wanting to impress is what keeps us moving when all we really want to do is curl up in a fetal position and whimper.
The art of life is to show your hand.
A person of riyaa (showing off) has three characteristics : He is lazy when alone, energetic when with others, and increases in his actions when he is praised while decreasing in them when he is criticized.
Show Us, Don't Tell Us
Fashion is gentility running away from vulgarity and afraid of being overtaken
It's very demeaning that we have to put on a show to prove that we know how to put on a show.
Vanity is often the unseen spur.
Like icebergs, people normally expose only a small part of themselves, and generally just the part they wish to show.
Fashion's about extravagance, and everyone needs a bit of that.
If the show of any thing be good for any thing, I am sure sincerity is better; for why does any man dissemble, or seem to be that which he is not, but because he thinks it good to have such a quality as he pretends to?
Effortlessness is an attractive thing. And it takes a lot of effort to achieve it.
Human beings do not wish to be modest; they want to be as expressive - that is, as immodest - as fear allows; fashion helps them solve that paradoxical problem.
People buy things they don't need, with money they don't have, to impress people they don't like.
Trying to impress others does - usually in quite the opposite way.
The will to do, the soul to dare.
What is modesty but inverted pride?
Extreme vanity sometimes hides under the garb of ultra modesty.
If we're really honest with ourselves, most of us will admit that we want to impress people, and this is what's causing us to do what we do.
The appeal all too often is to the gallery, hungry for sensation.
Our priests and presidents, our surgeons and lawyers, our educators and newscasters need worry less about satisfying the demands of their discipline than the demands of good showmanship.
A grin that wasn't natural, and that combined in a strange way affection and arrogance, the arrogance of the idealist who doesn't realize how easily he can be fooled.
What is beauty, but an extension of modesty?
Vanity is a motive of immense potency.
Appearance is a type of power.
Because of my value, I veil myself ... If I show too much, I wouldn't be revealing my true worth to you. I'd be distracting you from what matters most.
elegance and euphoria
Outward appearances are deceptive. What's within them, beneath them, is what matters.
Appearance rules the world.
Hoarders of guilty secrets are inevitably consumed with appearances.
Great Modesty often hides great Merit.