Quote means to repeat exactly something that somebody else has said or written before. A quote is also a passage or statement to give something as an example to support what you are saying. Quote has several other senses as a verb and a noun. Further, in this article, we have some of the Happiness Quotes.
Given below are Happiness Quotes :

“Happiness is when what you think, what you say, and what you do are in harmony.”
– Mahatma Gandhi
“Our happiness depends on wisdom all the way.”
– Sophocles
“Some cause happiness wherever they go; others whenever they go.”
– Oscar Wilde
“Be happy for this moment. This moment is your life.”
– Omar Khayyam
“Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions.”
– Dalai Lama
“It is not how much we have, but how much we enjoy, that makes happiness.”
– Charles Spurgeon
“You know it’s love when all you want is that person to be happy, even if you’re not part of their happiness.”
– Julia Roberts
“It’s enough to indulge and to be selfish but true happiness is really when you start giving back.”
– Adrian Grenier
“Happiness is dependent on self-discipline. We are the biggest obstacles to our own happiness. It is much easier to do battle with society and with others than to fight our own nature.”
– Dennis Prager
“Don’t wait around for other people to be happy for you. Any happiness you get you’ve got to make yourself.”
– Alice Walker
Scroll Down for more Quotes

“The person born with a talent they are meant to use will find their greatest happiness in using it.”
– Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
“Happiness never lays its finger on its pulse.”
– Adam Smith
“Love is trembling happiness.”
– Khalil Gibran
“Happiness is having a scratch for every itch.”
– Ogden Nash
“Nothing brings me more happiness than trying to help the most vulnerable people in society. It is a goal and an essential part of my life – a kind of destiny. Whoever is in distress can call on me. I will come running wherever they are.”
– Princess Diana
“The most worth-while thing is to try to put happiness into the lives of others.”
– Robert Baden-Powell
“You know it’s love when all you want is that person to be happy, even if you’re not part of their happiness.”
– Julia Roberts
“Most folks are as happy as they make up their minds to be.”
– Abraham Lincoln
“The best way to pay for a lovely moment is to enjoy it.”
– Richard Bach
“Happiness depends upon ourselves.”
– Aristotle
Scroll Down for more Quotes

“If you want to be happy, be.”
– Leo Tolstoy
“Remember that the happiest people are not those getting more, but those giving more.”
– H. Jackson Brown, Jr.
“There is only one way to happiness and that is to cease worrying about things which are beyond the power of our will.”
– Epictetus
“A table, a chair, a bowl of fruit and a violin; what else does a man need to be happy?”
– Albert Einstein
“Happiness is not a matter of intensity but of balance, order, rhythm and harmony.”
– Thomas Merton
“Happiness can exist only in acceptance.”
– George Orwell
“Money can’t buy happiness, but it can make you awfully comfortable while you’re being miserable.”
– Clare Boothe Luce
“Joy is prayer; joy is strength: joy is love; joy is a net of love by which you can catch souls.”
– Mother Teresa
“True happiness is… to enjoy the present, without anxious dependence upon the future.”
– Lucius Annaeus Seneca
“Action may not always bring happiness; but there is no happiness without action.”
– Benjamin Disraeli

“Now and then it’s good to pause in our pursuit of happiness and just be happy.”
– Guillaume Apollinaire
“The moments of happiness we enjoy take us by surprise. It is not that we seize them, but that they seize us.”
– Ashley Montagu
“An effort made for the happiness of others lifts above ourselves.”
– Lydia M. Child
“Happiness is a direction, not a place.”
– Sydney J. Harris
Quotations are used in spoken discourse for many reasons. They are often used by speakers to explain stories and events that happened in the past to other storytellers. Quotations are often used as a literary device to present one’s point of view. They are also widely used in spoken language when an interlocutor wishes to convey a proposition that they have heard.