Tevye: As the good book says, if you spit in the air, it lands in your face.
[before putting the grenades on the helicopter's landing skid as Dominic sends his car up in the air] Dominic Toretto: Don't miss.
Professor Henry Jones: Nice landing. Indiana Jones: Thank you.
[about to go looking for the shark] Brody: On the water? Hooper: Well, if we're looking for a shark we're not gonna find him on the land.
Jareth: And Hoggle, if she ever kisses you, I'll turn you into a prince. Hoggle: Y-you will? Jareth: Prince of the Land of Stench! [laughs]
Trapper John: I wish they wouldn't land those things here while we're playing golf.
[Nino points a gun at Chiki] Nino: Now... tell me. Who started the war? Chiki: [long pause] We did.
Isaac Stern: America. You know, land of the free, home of the brave. You know, Mickey Mouse.
Irish Mommy: And so they lived, happily together for three-hundred years. In the land of Tír na nÓg, of eternal youth and beauty.
Thomas E. Burnett, Jr.: Hey, this is a suicide mission. We have to do something. They are not gonna land this plane.
What was the reason for invading Iraq' Was it a humanitarian crusade or an economic one' I would be inclined to say the latter. It was the same with the Civil War, because the landed gentry's money was being stolen by the king.
False riches, consisting of money, houses and lands, acquired by selfish means at cost to others and thereafter used selfishly, are almost always used for the oppression of other persons.
You get to Hollywood and you are in the land of big money where they don't like to see only one screenwriter's name. It's much better if you've got four or five.
What white man can say I never stole his land or a penny of his money? Yet they say that I am a thief.
Industrial agriculture characteristically proceeds by single solutions to single problems: If you want the most money from your land this year, grow the crops for which the market price is highest.
All nations that throw their military weight around, occupying neighboring lands and treating the residents with callous and humiliating disregard, are already sliding towards the dark possibilities in human nature.
Who of us is able to read and understand and be entirely confident of the validity of his title to the land he lives on, and which he has redeemed from a state of nature by the most indefatigable industry and perseverance?
The system has for its object an increase of persons that are to intervene between the producer and the consumer, living on the product of the land and labour of others, diminishing the power of the first, and increasing the number of the last.
Where is the justice of political power if it executes the murderer and jails the plunderer, and then itself marches upon neighboring lands, killing thousands and pillaging the very hills?
Wind and solar power are land-intensive, a green sin, but not energy-dense, and affordable only when heavily subsidized. And wind power must be supplemented with hydrocarbons for reliability.
The swimmer adrift on the open seas measures his strength, and strives with all his muscles to keep himself afloat. But what is he to do when there is no land on the horizon, and none beyond it?