Taking its cue from a quotation by Petrarch, that "a good death does honor to a whole life," the agenda is focused on choices.
The sculpture took its name from a quotation of British sprinter Linford Christie.
One Latin excerpt was known from a quotation in Cyprian.
This provisional title stems from a quotation from Ecclesiastes that was used as a password on the second page of the story.
The title is taken from a quotation by Lucretius and means 'the torch of life'.
If you omit words from a quotation, indicate the omission by the use of three points (.), allowing a blank space on either side.
The speech acquired its name from a now-famous quotation embedded in it.
The title is derived from a quotation of John Donne's "Devotions", which serves as the motto for the original book.
The album gets its name from a quotation by American wit Dorothy Parker.
The title comes from a quotation from Shakespeare's King Lear: