Tweeting is a very personal form of expression. Who else could talk about my son refusing to wear a suit to meet the Pope, my husband flying a helicopter, or take a twitpic from our home?
Equally, we require a collective past - hence the endless reinterpretations of history, frequently to suit the perceptions of the present.
Man seeks to change the foods available in nature to suit his tastes, thereby putting an end to the very essence of life contained in them.
I was looking at a photograph of the 1997 election campaign yesterday, and I thought: 'My God. Did I really have that hairstyle? And that Tory blue suit?'
Some people are very good at being 'stars' and it suits them. I'm grudging about it and I find it annoying.
It's very important to feel good in my clothes. I like fashion that suits me. I don't take it too seriously.
I remember once Robert Taylor invited me to lunch. I asked him, 'What is your ambition?' He said, 'I want to have 10 very good suits.'
I don't normally like getting dressed up, but when I go to events, I like to look put together. I've got to say, getting in a nice suit feels good.
There are many different ways to practice meditation; it's good to experiment until you find one that seems to suit you.
But I would have executed much greater things, had not government always opposed my exertions, and placed others in situations which would have suited my talents.
The future's come and gone; it's a thing of the past. That once impossibly exotic expression 'the year 2000,' for so long evocative of silver suits and robots in pinnies, now feels antiquated.
I didn't know why God had chose me for this ordeal, but I was somehow suited to it and knew that I would see it through to the end.
As a comedian, I found this thing, this profession, that suits my mind and life force. To drop it to do something else? I just don't get that.
I love Alexander McQueen. I like the construction of his suits. I think it's fantastic.
My job isn't about pursuing fame and then becoming an actor. It's about becoming an actor, and if fame follows suit, that's fine.
The specific story line that people have responded to the most has been the horror of bathing suit shopping.
You can't get a cup of tea big enough or a book long enough to suit me.
The body is a clothing that suits us for life. (Le corps est un habit - Qui nous va à vie.)
I don't want to play everything. So I'll seek out roles that I'll say, 'This is edgy. This is fun. This is wicked. This suits me.'
It, sometimes, suits the slaveholders to claim, that their slavery is an exclusively State concern; and that the North has, therefore, nothing to do with it.
I don't want to look like Daisy Duke every day. I don't want to wear a bathing suit every day.