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Daddy S Girl Quotes

Quotes tagged as "daddy-s-girl" Showing 1-11 of 11
Ellen Hopkins
“I was about six years old, still Daddy's little girl, even though Daddy couldn't care less about me.
How could I expect any man every would?”
Ellen Hopkins, Burned

F. Scott Fitzgerald
“Daddy's girl. Was it a 'itty-bitty bravekins and did it suffer? Oooooo-tweet, de tweetest thing, wasn't she dest too tweet? Before her tiny fist the forces of lust and corruption rolled away; nay, the very march of destiny stopped; inevitably became inevitable, syllogism, dialectic, all rationality fell away”
F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tender Is the Night

Soroosh Shahrivar
“The greatest gift I ever received. And the greatest gift I ever gave to this world was you. I love you my daughter.”
Soroosh Shahrivar, Tajrish

“Your dreams and your imagination are the keys to ART so capture all of yours in this notebook.....”
TA Richards

Richard L.  Ratliff
“I will walk you down the aisle
Having traveled with you on the journey
I'll shed a tear and give you away all the while”
Richard L. Ratliff

Lauren Bradshaw
“Whose Daddy's Little Girl Now?”
Lauren Bradshaw, Daddy's Girl

Lauren Bradshaw
“I've always said women are vicious creatures - Detective Zach Grimes”
Lauren Bradshaw, Daddy's Girl

“When I cried, he cried with me,
When I was doubtful, he believed in me,
When I did well, he cheered me on,
When I messed up, he told me I was wrong,
Every now and then when I went against his will,
He punished me, but he praised me still
He taught me how to forgive, even when I was right,
He never like war, he was never one to fight,
I’ll always be a daddy’s girl,
I have the best daddy in the whole wide world.”
Charmaine J Forde

Farrah Rochon
“I will not be forced to marry!" Merida yelled.
She drew a claymore from the display stand, not because she thought she needed the long sword for protection, but because she felt more at peace with its heavy weight in her hand. Her mother had never understood her. She wanted Merida to be like her, a prim and proper royal lady. But Merida had never felt drawn to that life. She wanted to be free.
She relished the feel of the wind in her hair as she raced her horse across the glen. Delighted in the exhilaration of hitting a target from fifty paces away with her bow and arrow, or tumbling in the dirt with her three brothers.
She was her father's lass, not her mother's proper princess.”
Farrah Rochon, Fate Be Changed

Farrah Rochon
“I will not be forced to marry!" Merida yelled.
She drew a claymore from the display stand, not because she thought she needed the long sword for protection, but because she felt more at peace with its heavy weight in her hand. Her mother had never understood her. She wanted Merida to be like her, a prim and proper royal lady. But Merida had never felt drawn to that life. She wanted to be free.
She relished the feel of the wind in her hair as she raced her horse across the glen. Delighted in the exhilaration of hitting a target from fifty paces away with her bow and arrow, or tumbling in the dirt with her three brothers.
She was her father's fierce lass, not her mother's proper princess.”
Farrah Rochon, Fate Be Changed