Leslie
Ford:
Anyone pretending he has no interest in money is either
a fool or a knave.
Edith
Wharton:
The only way not to think about money is to have a
great deal of it.
Katherine
Mansfield:
I must say I hate money, but it's the lack of it that
I hate most.
Mary
Pettibone Poole:
People who think money can do anything may very well
be suspected of doing anything for money.
Fannie
Hurst:
Some people think they are worth a lot of money just
because they have it.
Margaret
Halsey:
What I know about money, I learned the hard way -
by having had it.
Aphra
Behn:
Money speaks sense in a language all nations understand.
Gloria
Steinem:
We can tell our values by looking at our checkbook
stubs.
Dorothy
Parker:
The two most beautiful words in the English language
are "check enclosed."
Ayn
Rand:
Money is the barometer of a society's virtue.
Ayn
Rand:
So you think that money is the root of all evil? Have
you ever asked what is the root of money?
Vera
Caspary:
Money can be more of a barrier between people than
language or race or religion.
Lillian
Day:
Money isn't everything, your health is the other ten
per cent.
Margaret
Walker:
Friends and good manners will carry you where money
won't go.
Gail
Sheehy:
The best way to attract money, she had discovered,
was to give the appearance of having it.
Cynthia
Ozick:
It is true that money attracts; but much money repels.
Mae
West:
Money is of value for what it buys, and in love it
buys time, place, intimacy, comfort, and a private
corner alone.
Jenny
Holzer:
Money creates taste.
Kate
Seredy:
I make money using my brains and lose money listening
to my heart. But in the long run my books balance
pretty well.
Kate
Smiley:
As soon as you bring up money, I notice, conversation
gets sociological, then political, then moral.
Virginia
Woolf:
Money dignifies what is frivolous if unpaid for.
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Women's
Quotations by Theme