“I was a graduate student at Oxford when I discovered Georgiana.”
“I trained at the Oxford School of Drama.”
“I studied at Howard. I studied at Oxford.”
“Oxford also taught me something else – it taught me scepticism.”
“Oxford, the paradise of dead philosophies.”
“From 1931 to 1937, I was a Fellow and Lecturer in Economics at Hertford College, Oxford.”
“The silver Thames takes some part of this county in its journey to Oxford.”
“In 1960, I went to St. Catherine’s College, Oxford, and received the B.A. degree in Chemistry in 1964.”
“Oxford has a slightly mythical rep, particularly for people who haven’t been there.”
“I literally fell among Quakers when I went up to Oxford.”
“I was educated at Bradfield College and Oxford, where I graduated in 1939.”
“It was 1988, and I was just finishing a D.Phil at Oxford University on the topic of ‘Nietzsche and German Idealism.’”
“I was a modest, good-humoured boy. It is Oxford that has made me insufferable.”
“I prefer simpler shirts, like a solid oxford or pinstripe, and with a solid cashmere crewneck or V-neck.”
“I’d fought in the Hungarian Revolution in 1956, having left Oxford to do so.”
“I went to study at Oxford University in the 1980s on an imperial scholarship instituted by Cecil Rhodes.”
“The Oxford manner is, alas, indefinable; I was going to say indefensible.”
“Every well-dressed gentleman must have an all-cotton oxford cloth button-down shirt from Brooks Brothers.”
“I live part of the time in Oxford, and I love it.”
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