George Savile
George Savile, 1st Marquess of Halifax (11 November 1633 - 5 April 1695) tawu ngota negarawan, ta hemoluladu, wawu politikus to Enggeleti.
Lumadu
boli'a- Our nature hardly allows us to have enough of anything without having too much.
- Nga'amila tawuwalo tingga maoditolo jamotolu lo sadi-sadiya debo mo'otohilao nga'amila malali haku liyo.
- On Dr. Gilbert Burnet (1643-1715), Bishop of Salisbury: as cited in The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors: 1639-1729 , ed. Charles Wells Moulton, H. Malkan (1910) p. 591.
- Nga'amila tawuwalo tingga maoditolo jamotolu lo sadi-sadiya debo mo'otohilao nga'amila malali haku liyo.
The Anatomy of an Equivalent (1688)
- Every single act either weakeneth or improveth our credit with other men; and as an habit of being just to our word will confirm, so an habit of too freely dispensing with it must necessarily destroy it.
- Nga'amila hehutuwalo tiye mo'otapu niyati to tawuwalo; Madelo hehutuwalo adi-adili to woluwo londo Eya mayi, odito'olo anu malopa-lopato da'a malali andu-andulu.
- The Anatomy of an Equivalent: from The Complete Works of George Savile, First Marquess of Halifax (1912), ed. Sir Walter Alexander Raleigh, Clarendon Press p. 123.
- Nga'amila hehutuwalo tiye mo'otapu niyati to tawuwalo; Madelo hehutuwalo adi-adili to woluwo londo Eya mayi, odito'olo anu malopa-lopato da'a malali andu-andulu.
The Lady's New Year's Gift: or Advice to a Daughter (1688)
- A Husband without faults is a dangerous observer.
- Hiyalo diya-diya'a loma'o tala liyo, bilo-bilohu mo'ohe.
A Character of King Charles II (1750)
- A very great memory often forgetteth how much time is lost by repeating things of no use.
- Huto'o umotota molilipata i'ilangi dadata wakutu to u'jahunaliyo.
- On King Charles II’s memory.
- Huto'o umotota molilipata i'ilangi dadata wakutu to u'jahunaliyo.