You are what you repeatedly do. Excellence is not an event -- it is a habit.
Aristotle
(BC 384-322, Greek philosopher)
http://www.cybernation.com/quotationcenter/quoteshow.php?id=52827
He did not say it.
"We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then is not an act, but a habit". This is not literally from Aristotle, but Will Durant summarizing Aristotle's philosophy in ''The Story of Philosophy'' (1926).
Mark Antony repeatedly refers to Brutus as "an honorable man".
i said satyameva jayate
Odysseus repeatedly formulates and executes acts of pretense. In the Iliad, he sneaks into the Troy disguised as a beggar and thought up the idea of the Trojan horse. In the Odyssey, he repeatedly thinks up schemes in order to escape near death experiences, such as covering himself and his men in sheepskin to escape the Cyclops. Odysseus' entire worldview, as evident by his actions, is one of pretense is necessary at times in order to succeed.
He said "we are what we repeatedly do, excellence then is not an act, but a habit."
LOVE. They said so repeatedly.
because she loves you so she said you are her GOD She loves and worships you.
reliability
I don't know what I rebate Cone is but I do know this It was said repeatedly in the reverse of Lady Gagas song poker face
I repeatedly reminded her to finish her homework.
She enjoyed hunting, archery, and dancing. Aspects of her included hunting, wilderness and wild animals, which she is repeatedly said to enjoy.
It means to repeat Repeatedly. For example, when you see a car drive past, the wheels turn around repeatedly. This is repititious. Someone who asks you the same question every time they see you. This is repititious.
The verb for repeatedly is repeat. As in "to repeat something".
When I screwed your mom against a dirty alley wall repeatedly last night and this morning and she said, "More, more, more" until we were both satiated
No, they don't love each other and were never dating. They both said that repeatedly and Josh had a girlfriend the whole time. He went to the premiere with her.
Yes it is. Many (but not all) words that end in -ly are adverbs. You can use repeatedly to modify a verb. For example, "He denied the accusation repeatedly."