Quotes on the topic: Cleaning


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There's times when I'm cleaning the kitchen, and while I'm doing that, I'm singing and air guitaring with a broom to 'You Should Be Dancing.'


When I first immigrated to the United States, there were not many jobs that stood out. So I worked at a gas station, cleaning.


My mother came here to New York. She and my grandmother were domestics, cooking, cleaning for other people.


I go to the dentist every six months, I get a cleaning, so... I'm fortunate enough that those fluoride treatments as a child worked. Not getting any cavities.


I was supposed to be cleaning out the barn, but I was usually reading romance novels. That's how you grow up to be a thriller writer.


You're not going to talk to your vacuum cleaning robot: in fact, you may never see your vacuum cleaning robot because, ideally, you come home every day and your floors are freshly vacuumed.


I entered the work force cleaning breast pumps at a pharmacy! It was a part-time gig while I was at school... no interview required.


I have sporadic OCD cleaning moments around the house. But then I get lazy and I'm cured. It's a very inconsistent personality trait.


I always clean before the cleaning lady comes. If not, when I come home, I can't find anything. Cleaning ladies are always hiding things you leave out.


I think the biggest thing is clean as you go. Wash all your knives, cutting boards, dishes, when you are done cooking, not look at a sink full of dishes after you are done. Cleaning as you go helps keep away cross contamination and you avoid having food borne bacteria.


Of course I was delighted the flight was over, but I still had to worry about cleaning up inside the cabin, I had to worry about the hatch, how to get in the sling, and so on.


When you make something, cleaning it out of structural debris is one of the most vital things you do.


Well, I can do certain jobs because smells don't bother me. But that means I'm usually the one at the ranch cleaning up all the manure.


My first job was cleaning sheep pens.


I could draw Bloom County with my nose and pay my cleaning lady to write it, and I'd bet I wouldn't lose 10% of my papers over the next twenty years. Such is the nature of comic-strips. Once established, their half-life is usually more than nuclear waste.


The time I save setting up and cleaning up probably balances out by the time I spend on output.


When I made my Broadway debut, I was still cleaning houses, something I'd done since I went out on my own at 15.


Cleaning is therapy for me. I'm not ashamed of holding the duster or broom.


I am the granddaughter of a Welsh coal miner who was determined that his kids get out of the mines. My dad got his first job when he was six years old, in a little village in Wales called Nantyffyllon, cleaning bottles at the Colliers Arms.


Why spend money on movies when you can spend it on gas? Or dry cleaning? Or groceries?