Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I rode horses since I was a kid.
I never rode a motorcycle before 'CHiPs.'
I never rode a bull - I'm not that stupid.
I never rode in an automobile until I was 12.
While I was in Chicago, I rode my bike everywhere.
Christ rode on an ass, but now asses ride on Christ.
When I was a little boy, I rode, but I didn't own horses.
I was hit by a car once on my bike, but I still rode home.
I once rode a motorcycle across Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco!
I rode into the dawning world of television in 1944 on a train.
I never drove in England. I rode bicycles. So driving is terrifying.
I rode on a float in one of the parades in Mississippi. It's an experience.
So while I was studying, I rode my Trials bike, then I moved to roadracing.
In New York, they kind of rode with me from day one: they understand who I am.
The first time I rode a bike I was four or five. I crashed into the back of a car.
I had great faith in Prince Of Penzance, from the moment I rode him for the first time.
I rode a horse once when I was young, and I fell off. I never wanted to ride a horse again.
Rubio rode his skill as a high school quarterback to college in Florida, followed by law school.
The first two days that I rode a horse, I had someone controlling it with a rope around its neck.
He flung himself from the room, flung himself upon his horse and rode madly off in all directions.
I think it was much better when you got on your horse and rode two miles to talk to your neighbor.
In 1960, John F. Kennedy rode a superior televised debate performance to victory over Richard Nixon.
Mostly it would be those who rode in a particular even would hang out with those who rode in the same event.
I rode my bike to school every day from age five to age fourteen. It was a small town - you could go anywhere.
Just as we could have rode into the sunset, along came the Internet, and it tripled the significance of the PC.
The first thing I ever rode when I was a kid was a motorcycle, so I knew how to drive a motorcycle before a car.
I've had many managers, and learned a lot from them, the good ones always stayed even-keeled, never rode the waves.
'Bag of Bones' was a big, distorted yet wonderfully entertaining novel that rode high on the bestseller lists in 1998.
I was rejected by casting directors during the day. I attended class in the evening, then rode 90 miles on the train home.
I always thought I was going to be a professional horse rider because I rode horses competitively from zero to 17 years old.
I don't want to just be part of a team, I want to help a team, and I don't want anyone to say I rode the bench to get a ring.
I'd like to do something involving jazz. But books are how I earn my living, and I'd like to stay with the horse I rode in on.
I don't live as 'Stone Cold.' I live as Steve Austin. I was 'Stone Cold' Steve Austin back in 2003, then I rode off into the sunset.
I rode in a nine-day charity ride recently, averaged 43km a day and still finished in the lead group. I'm 38, not quite finished yet.
My first winner was on Legal Steps, in Ireland, at Thurles, in March 1992. I rode for Jim Bolger, and his stable jockey was Christy Roche.
I'll never forget the first time I rode a bike with pedal straps. I stopped at a traffic light and fell over like Arte Johnson in 'Laugh-In.'
I've always wanted to be my own person. Even when I was 'Noah who rode horses,' I wanted to be Noah Cyrus, not anyone else or a family member.
I rode with four street-clothes cops in the East Village. I spent six weeks riding with them every day - in street clothes, with a vest underneath.
I owned the world that hour as I rode over it. free of the earth, free of the mountains, free of the clouds, but how inseparably I was bound to them.
It is important for us to understand where we came from and how we got here because it would be very foolish of us to get off that horse we rode in on.
When a child, my dreams rode on your wishes, I was your son, high on your horse, My mind a top whipped by the lashes Of your rhetoric, windy of course.
At first I wanted to be a jockey. I rode horses in Cleveland but I kept falling off and I was afraid of horses. So there wasn't much of a future in it.
I rode fire trucks, slid down fire poles, wore a lot of red, and made a lot of appearances. I've always had a special place in my heart for fire fighters.
When I was a kid, we played outside until we couldn't see and had to go in. I rode my bicycle and played tag football, kick the can, and hide-and-go-seek.
I grew up in the middle of everything. I walked the streets alone, I rode the trains alone, I came home at three in the morning alone; that was what I did.
The thing that got us going early was the running boom. And then, I think, we rode the Jordan bit, which then kind of crossed us over into the pop culture.
Growing up in New York City, my car culture is minimal. I rode on the train, the bus. I walked; I rode my bike, and when I was younger, I rode my skateboard.
Now, being a girl, I was ashamed of my body and my lack of strength. So I tried to be a man. I shot, rode, jumped, and took part in all the fights of the boys.
I rode for Maindy Flyers, a local kids' club from Cardiff. We started travelling across the country doing races, but Manchester was the first stage race I did.
For eight or 10 years, I got wrapped up in chasing records. Everything was a number. Didn't matter what I won, it was a number. Every horse I rode was a number.