Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Waterloo. 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 Waterloo Quotes And Sayings by 97 Authors including Darren Flutie,Robert Benchley,Margaret Atwood,Lilly Singh,Robert Burns for you to enjoy and share.
I obviously have a lot of love and affection for the people of Hamilton from playing there for so long.
New York - The city where the people from Oshkosh look at the people from Dubuque in the next theater seats and say These New Yorkers don't dress any better than we do.
Vancouver is the suicide capital of the country. You keep going west until you run out. You come to the edge. Then you fall off.
I will forever and always identify with Scarborough - no matter where I move.
O Scotia! my dear, my native soil!
For whom my warmest wish to Heaven is sent
There is a town in north Ontario,
With dream comfort memory to spare,
And in my mind
I still need a place to go,
All my changes were there.
Blue, blue windows behind the stars,
Yellow moon on the rise,
Big birds flying across the sky,
Throwing shadows on our eyes.
Chicago is constantly auditioning for the world, determined that one day, on the streets of Barcelona, in Berlin's cabarets, in the coffee shops of Istanbul, people will know and love us in our multidimensional glory, dream of us the way they dream of San Francisco and New York.
Personally, I love Toronto.
Whistler,' Manet called. 'How's your mother?
I love Toronto, I have spent a lot of time up there working. There's a lot of stuff going on there.
I was born in the Ottawa General Hospital right after the Gray Cup Football Game in 1939. Six months later, I was backpacked into the Quebec bush. I grew up in and out of the bush, in and out of Ottawa, Sault Ste. Marie and Toronto.
Aberdeen, a city in the northern reaches of HSBC-London. Their
Ontario is fortunate to have the expertise, insight and leadership of The Honourable David C. Onley. I look forward to working with him to promote an inclusive, accessible Ontario that will help strengthen our province's economy.
Skyline reveals a city's purpose and character. Oxford had its dreaming spires; Manhattan its glittering towers; Edinburgh its eccentric spikes.
Berlin is liberation. Architecture, man!
London! the needy villain's general home, The common sewer of Paris and of Rome! With eager thirst, by folly or by fate, Sucks in the dregs of each corrupted state.
Now, gentlemen, let tomorrow be their Waterloo!
I live in east London, but I'm not cool.
It can't be any simpler: the farewell is going to be on the Champs-Elysees.
The sight of London to my exiled eyes
Is as Elysium to a new-come soul.
Toronto is a kind of New York operated by the Swiss.
The winds of change are blowing across Ontario.
I like Toronto; the people are really chill.
Paris strikes the vulgar part of us infinitely the most, but to a thinking mind London is incomparably the most delightful subject for contemplation.
(Canada) - the most parochial nationette on earth ... I have been living in this sanctimonious icebox ... painting portraits of the opulent Methodists of Toronto. Methodism and money in this city have produced a sort of hell of dullness.
London goes beyond any boundary or convention.It contains every wish or word ever spoken, every action or gesture ever made, every harsh or noble statement ever expressed. It is illimitable. It is Infinite London.
Markham even had our banners ready. The polite NON AD CAPITAGIUM (No to the poll tax), the hopeful MAGIS STIPENDIUM HISTORICI (More money for historians) and the always accurate POLICITI NOSTRAE OMNEC WANKERS SUNT (Most politicians are not very good).
In a sense, 'Schmidt' is the most Omaha of my films. But have I gotten it right? I'm not sure. Did Fellini get Rome right? Did Ozu get Tokyo right?
Everywhere I go, every city, they're always like, 'What's in the water in Canada? What's in the water in Toronto?'
When we arrived in London, my sadness at leaving Paris was turned into despair. After my long stay in the French capital, huge, ponderous, massive London seemed to me as ugly a thing as man could contrive to make.
I love Toronto, It's the best city.
Gentlemen. If you're going to take Vienna, take it.
I cannot go to Montreal without going to Beauty's, my favorite place for breakfast, where I have the Mish-Mash omelet with hot dogs, salami, eggs, green peppers, and onions, and the best banana bread in the world. It's legendary!
Edmonton is Canada's answer to Omaha. Solid, unassuming, and surrounded by a whole lot of nothing. It's a place that makes you think of sensible shoes.
McMaster University, Courtesy of Kevin Mitchell,
The musical equivalent of St Pancras Station.
(on Elgar)
London is a riddle. Paris is an explanation.
I'm an east coaster, you know, I'm brought up in Toronto where it's very much, like, kind of a miniature New York in that there's a subway and you're surrounded by people a lot and, you know, you bump into people and you have interactions and you communicate and la la la.
I am in the U.K. for inspiration because I'm doing a follow on series to 'The Infernal Devices,' called 'The Last Hours.' It's a re-telling of 'Great Expectations' with 'Shadowhunters' ... because why not! It's set in 1903, so I'm doing a lot of locational research.
Berlin is my favourite city.
Brooklyn, New York, and
Montreal's not a city. It's a Disney World for alcoholics.
Lancaster, California ... that promised land sometimes called 'the west coast of Iowa.
Oh I have been to Ludlow fair, and left my necktie God knows where. And carried half way home, or near, pints and quarts of Ludlow beer.
People come from all over the world to see this little place they've seen in movies and read about in history books: Soho.
London, ... like a bowl of viscid human fluid, boils sullenly over the rim of its encircling hills and slops messily into the home counties.
go-go hall on my way home from school.
I'm from Winnipeg, you idiot!
If the purpose of the stumpy little NFT theatre under Waterloo Bridge is not to acquaint young audiences with Ozu, with Ophuels, with D. W. Griffith and with Agnes Varda, then what exactly does it exist for?
King Offa's dyke,
I'm not trying to bring New York to Toronto. I want to understand Toronto better.
The new French theme park based on Napoleon is named Napoleon's Bivouac, and will honor Napoleon with rides, battle reenactments, and the brutal March on Moscow ride. That's a walk-in freezer you stand in for 18 months while you try to eat a dead horse.
London, how could one ever be tired of it?
Toronto is a city that has yet to fall in love with itself ...
Dresden: of all German cities, Smiley's favourite. He had loved its architecture, its odd jumble of medieval and classical buildings, sometimes reminiscent of Oxford, its cupolas, towers, and spires, its copper-green roofs shimmering under a hot sun.
It was a small provincial place with great people and I had a happy childhood growing up in Queens.
You see these young people in Antigonish who are coming from Cape Breton, and these are really smart, attractive young people, who are living in a place that's been very rough economically. It's a very special thing to be helpful there.
I always look forward to playing in Toronto because it's such a historic city when it comes to hockey.
books, teapots, thunderstorms, bridges, street musicians, coming attractions
Canada - they won't like me saying this, but it's really like it's a part of Michigan, that area.
Street towards Covent Garden. There was
This is the province that pioneered dreaming big,
Kingsport or feel at home there. Before
Simon Fraser University would make an elegant ruin
Toronto's likable, but it could be a lot more, as I think Montreal is, lovable. What we need more than anything, I think, is a great pedestrian promenade. Pick a busy streetscape, close it to cars forever, and it will fill with people enjoying nothing more than the pleasure of their own company.
I spent five years of my childhood in Port Elgin and came back to spend another five years of my young adulthood there as well, including the years in which I was first published.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
Fill'd with death, ya pens'll hang ya.
One has not the alternative of speaking of London as a whole, for the simple reason that there is no such thing as the whole of it. It is immeasurable - embracing arms never meet. Rather it is a collection of many wholes, and of which of them is it most important to speak?
London perpetually attracts, stimulates, gives me a play and a story and a poem, without any trouble, save that of moving my legs through the streets ... To walk alone through London is the greatest rest.
There's only one London. That's it. We are what we are.
I love Toronto. I love it. I love Toronto. I love Canada. I can't wait to get back. Can't wait to have some Timbits.
I came from Winnipeg and a small-town background, and I wouldn't say a depressed area, but Winnipeg has never been a rich area like Toronto.
I was born in Sarnia, Ontario; a small town, it's where oil was pretty much discovered in North America.
University University of Toronto University of Nebraska
I am, and always will be, proud to be a Hackney girl.
If you're curious, London's an amazing place.
I came to live in Shepperton in 1960. I thought: the future isn't in the metropolitan areas of London. I want to go out to the new suburbs, near the film studios. This was the England I wanted to write about, because this was the new world that was emerging.
Well what I want them to know is just like, John Wayne was from Waterloo, Iowa. That's the kind of spirit that I have, too.
I say it the way it is. I don't play around. That has been my success, in my opinion, for Mississauga.
I can't get enough of London! I love all the picnic benches, the old-school phone booths and parks in the middle of the city.
I used to go to Maple Leafs games all the time when Nic shot To Die For here in Toronto. This is a great city. I love it here.
Never shall I forget those naked, clean-swept little Canadian towns, one just like the other. Before I was twelve years old, I must have lived in fifty of them.
On the illusive "Monsieur Hortalez." When my friend Steven and I went looking for the building one afternoon, we came to the address at 47 rue Vieille-du-Temple and realized we had been there before.
In Berlin, things are serious but not hopeless. In Vienna, they are hopeless but not serious.
London's where I was brought up. It's where my heart is and where I get my inspiration,
I was born in St. Andrew's and raised in Kingston then I attended the Alpha Boy's school.
Berlin is the testicles of the West, every time I want the West to scream, I squeeze on Berlin.
Over the years, I've lived in a variety of places, including America, but I was born and raised in the Lake District, in Cumbria. Growing up in that rural, sodden, mountainous county has shaped my brain, perhaps even my temperament.
. . . when my family headed out west, like any birth canal Rochester was forgotten.
I walk to Oxford Street and climb on the number 8. It's freezing and it starts to rain and it's the ugliest bus I've ever seen, rattling down the ugliest streets, in the ugliest city, in the ugliest country, in the ugliest of all possible worlds.
The best thing about London is Paris,
To me, Toronto is a good party city, I think Vancouver has the best smoke, you know. And then, Montreal has the best..uh..Chinese food?
Have you ever, on a cloudless night, looked down from a passing aircraft flying over Canada? Endless, glowing strings of cities, towns, and homesteads. Stretching on and on, one province to the next. With only the stars in the distance.
I don't care where we go, as long as it's not Dubuque!" Dumbo
Hymies." And "Hymietown.
Because my father is French, my first school was the Lycee Francais de Londres in Kensington.
Chicago has disappointed her enemies and astonished the world
Without Montreal, Canada would be hopeless.
Take a newspaper account of Waterloo or Trafalgar, with all the small advertisements: it seems much more real than reading about it in a history book.
Nincompoops. (Quincy,