
“I’m My Own Grandpa” (lyrics by Ray Stevens).“I’m Nobody! Who are you? / Are you – Nobody – too?” ( Emily Dickinson).“I know one thing, that I know nothing” (Socrates, as according to Plato).“Life is a preparation for the future and the best preparation for the future is to live as if there were none” (Albert Einstein).“Cowards die many times before their deaths The valiant never taste of death but once” ( Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare).“It’s weird not to be weird” (John Lennon).“Men work together…Whether they work together or apart” ( Robert Frost).“Whatever you do in life will be insignificant, but it is very important that you do it” (Ghandi).“I can’t live with or without you” ( With or Without You, lyrics by U2).Here are some famous examples of paradox: Paradox is also found in many examples of poetry, prose, drama, lyrics, and clever quotations. “You never know what worse luck your bad luck has saved you from.” (No Country for Old Men) Famous Examples of Paradox.“I’m going to make him an offer he can’t refuse.” (The Godfather).

You mean you can’t very well take less.” (Disney’s Alice in Wonderland)

That behemoth factory was built by Westinghouse in 1960 to create giant power transformers. Traci Lutton, vice president of Muncie-Delaware County Economic Development Alliance, said the general consensus is that the still-under-construction plant is now the largest standing building in Delaware County, rivaling Progress Rail's 750,000-square-foot factory located just north up Cowan Road. It will encompass 862,000 square feet and use 4,500 tons of structural steel and 75,000 cubic yards of concrete when done, according to its general contractor. "Colossal," "enormous," gigantic" and even "gargantuan" all appear appropriate for the edifice angling southeast to northwest atop what was farm dirt. MUNCIE, Ind. - The sheer size of the CANPACK beverage and beer can factory, just finishing its rise up from an empty field near Fuson and Cowan roads off the Muncie Bypass, invites a consult with the thesaurus. In an earlier version of this story the first name of Jim Gorman, senior project manager with Blue Rock Construction, was incorrect.
