The German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche once said, “Whatever doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.” The American stand-up comic Conan O’Brien offered a witty comeback: “What Nietzsche failed to tell ...
Psychology Today: Whatever Doesn't Kill You, Will Only Make You Stronger? | Psychology Today Ireland
Whatever Doesn't Kill You, Will Only Make You Stronger? | Psychology Today Ireland
Mint on MSN: Quote of the day by Friedrich Nietzsche on hardship and failure: 'What doesn't kill me makes me…'
Quote of the day by Friedrich Nietzsche on hardship and failure: 'What doesn't kill me makes me…'
MPR News: Mary Lucia shares it all in 'What Doesn’t Kill Me Makes Me Weirder and Harder to Relate To'
Mary Lucia's memoir, "What Doesn’t Kill Me Makes Me Weirder and Harder to Relate To," tells the full story of how she dealt with a stalker in private while she tried to maintain a very public life.
Mary Lucia shares it all in 'What Doesn’t Kill Me Makes Me Weirder and Harder to Relate To'
"Whatever" in its traditional sense, such as in "whatever you might think," or "whatever choice you make," is a totally different animal than this kind of teenage use that has spread everywhere and indicates a total dismissal of the line of discussion or the person.
The American Heritage Dictionary seems to allow both: Both whatever and what ever may be used in sentences such as Whatever (or What ever) made her say that? Critics have occasionally objected to the one-word form, but many respected writers have used it. The same is true of the forms whoever, whenever, wherever, and however.