15 quotes about oxford follow in order of popularity. Be sure to bookmark and share your favorites!

It's more like the Oxford model of education, where a student takes on a project, goes off and does it and comes back to report on it.

Steve Lemke

Our goal is to eventually have no women staying at Oxford Street.

Jon Bradley

I could, I think, quite easily have gone to Oxford. I got four good A levels, but my father's income was such that I wouldn't have got a grant, and he wouldn't let me go to university, and that was the end of it.

Colin Baker

Anybody who has seen an ad for the Oxford English dictionary, which is 20 volumes, or an ad for Encyclopedia Britannica, which is Lord knows how many more volumes, knows you can fit an awful lot of data on one CD.

Richard Bacon

For some of them, it won't hit them until they're on the city's streets. Children in Oxford, Alabama, can hardly know what to expect.

Chris Pennington

The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary.

Simon Winchester

There is a story of an Oxford student who once remarked, "I despise all Americans, but have never met one I didn't like";.

Gordon W. Allport

Neon strikes on England, noon on Oxford town,Beauty she was statue cold - there's blood upon her gown.

James Elroy Flecker

I saw the Oxford English Dictionary there for the first time.

Harold Bloom

We're very excited for this opportunity to install the Oxford Media product. Having these 6 new hotel sites gives us a good, solid base of hotel references. Moving forward looks good.

Wendy Palmer

Undergraduates owe their happiness chiefly to the consciousness that they are no longer at school. The nonsense which was knocked out of them at school is all put gently back at Oxford or Cambridge.

Max Beerbohm

In Europe all evidence points to mobile TV being mass-market. Oxford will address the critical success factors such as scalability, consumer experience, content mix and consumer choice.

Terry Howard

If any one of them deserves to be a shrine, it's Paddington. [Its] departure board reads like a romantic novel, as it flicks its way through Oxford, Bath, the Cotswolds and the very heart of England.

Mark Wallington

A self-made man is one who believes in luck and sends his son to Oxford.

Christina Stead

I often think how much easier the world would have been to manage if Herr Hitler and Signor Mussolini had been at Oxford.

Edward F. Halifax