Service Features
  • 275 words per page
  • Font: 12 point Courier New
  • Double line spacing
  • Free unlimited paper revisions
  • Free bibliography
  • Any citation style
  • No delivery charges
  • SMS alert on paper done
  • No plagiarism
  • Direct paper download
  • Original and creative work
  • Researched any subject
  • 24/7 customer support

It is sometimes difficult to be inspired when trying to write a persuasive essay, book report or thoughtful research paper. Often of times, it is hard to find words that best describe your ideas. VIPessays now provides a database of over 150,000 quotations and proverbs from the famous inventors, philosophers, sportsmen, artists, celebrities, business people, and authors that are aimed to enrich and strengthen your essay, term paper, book report, thesis or research paper.

Try our free search of constantly updated quotations and proverbs database.

QuotationsAuthorsTopicsKeywords
Browse Authors: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
(Click a letter to view the authors)
Letter "J" » Jane Austen Quotes
«Nobody can tell what I suffer! But it is always so. Those who do not complain are never pitied.»
«He [Darcy] expressed himself on the occasion as sensibly and as warmly as a man in violent love can be supposed to.»
«It will, I believe, be everywhere found, that as the clergy are, or are not what they ought to be, so are the rest of the nation.»
Author: Jane Austen (Novelist, Writer) | Keywords: clergy, The Nation
«How can you contrive to write so even?»
«It was, perhaps, one of those cases in which advice is good or bad only as the event decides.»
Author: Jane Austen (Novelist, Writer) | Keywords: decides
«A man . . . must have a very good opinion of himself when he asks people to leave their own fireside, and encounter such a day as this, for the sake of coming to see him. He must think himself a most agreeable fellow.»
«Everybody has their taste in noises as well as in other matters.»
«His own enjoyment, or his own ease, was, in every particular, his ruling principle.»
«The youth and cheerfulness of morning are in happy analogy, and of powerful operation; and if the distress be not poignant enough to keep the eyes unclosed, they will be sure to open to sensations of softened pain and brighter hope»
«. . . she had prejudices on the side of ancestry; she had a value for rank and consequence, which blinded her a little to the faults of those who possessed them.»
Author: Jane Austen (Novelist, Writer) | Keywords: rank

Pages: « Previous 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Next »


Research our database of over 800,000 top-quality pre-written papers plus 15,000 biographies for only $9.95/month.
Instant Account Activation. Register Now.