Famous Proverbs

1] There is nothing new under the sun
2] Too many cooks spoil the broth
3] It is a poor (or sad) heart that never rejoices
4] Corn him well and he will work better
5] Men are known by the company they keep.
6] In the end, things will mend
7] He that burns most, shines most
8] It is easier to praise poverty than to bear it.
9] Only a fool will make the doctor his heir
10] Safety lies in the middle course
11] The tide must be taken when it comes
12] Manners and money make a gentleman
13] In a clam sea, every man is a pilot
14] Prove your friend ere you have need
15] Advice when most needed is least heeded
16] If youth knew what age would crave. It would both get and save
17] A fox should not be of the jury at a goose’s trial
18] The rich knows not who is his friend
19] Every beggar is descended from some king, and every king is descended from some beggar.
20] Manners make the man
21] When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then a gentleman?
22] God gave us the seed of every plant, but we must sow it.
23] Sometimes clemency is cruelty, and cruelty clemency
24] Oh, what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive!
25] All covet all lose.
26] Riches along make no men happy
27] It is the unexpected that always happens
28] Mustard is a good sauce, but mirth is better
29] Quietness is a great treasure
30] The poorer one is, the more devils one meets
31] Jesters do oft prove prophets
32] He who does not rise with the sun does not enjoy the day
33] Every advantage has its disadvantage
34] He is lifeless that is faultless
35] Patience under old injuries invites new ones
36] Jam tomorrow and jam yesterday – but never jam today
37] Mercy to the criminal may be cruelty to the people
38] Jack would be a gentleman if he had money
39] You may lead (or take) a horse to water, but you cannot make him drink
40] He that stumbles twice over one stone, deserves to break his shin
41] As long lives a merry man as a sad
42] Men are not angles
43] Joy and sorrow are next door neighbours.
44] Everyone to his taste
45] It’s a long lane that has no turning
46] Tigers and deer do not over.
47] It is a foolish sheep that makes the wolf his confessor
48] One sword keeps another in the sheath
49] Pursuits become habits
50] Ill weeds grow apace (or fast)
51] Finger were made before forks, and hands before knives
52] The bread never falls but on its buttered side
53] A wise man will learn something even from the words of a fool
54] A rose by any other name would smell as sweet
55] Don’t burn the candle at both ends
56] A tiger that roars is not a man-eater
57] Exchange (or Fair exchange) is no robbery
58] Don’t cut off your nose to spite your face
59] A nod is as good as wink to a blind horse
60] When someone gives up a peach, return him a plum
61] He that sows thistles shall reap prickles.
62] Care brings grey hair.
63] Business is business
64] Good counsel has no price. Nothing is given so freely as advice.
65] He who can does. He who cannot teaches
66] All meat pleases not all mouths
67] Danger makes men devout
68] Afflictions are sent to us by God for our good
69] Young saint, old devil.
70] Spend not where you may save, spare not where you must spend
71] To be discontented is to be like a snake trying to swallow an elephant
72] Past experiences are the best guide for future undertakings
73] It is good sheltering under an old hedge
74] Nature will have her course
75] Years know more than books
76] Bread is the staff of life.
77] On an open plain, the rhododendron is a tall tree
78] A jack of all traders is master of none
79] A wise man changes his mind, a fool never.
80] Many a little makes a mickle
81] We shall beat our swords into ploughshares
82] As long as the old horse lives, his habits will not change
83] Money talks
84] Let your yea be yea; and your nay, nay.
85] Threatened folk live long
86] Tigers and deer do not over.
87] Virtue is the only true nobility
88] Keep conscience clear, then never fear
89] He that has a tongue in his head may find his way anywhere
90] A bad workman quarrels with his tools.
91] The greatest step is that out of doors
92] New things are fair
93] A man whose conscience is clear, of a knock at midnight has no fear
94] Content is more than a kingdom
95] The owl thinks her own young fairest
96] Men strain at gnats and swallow camels
97] What is worse than ill luck?
98] The tongue ever turns to the aching tooth
99] When the cat is away, the mice will play
100] The great would have none great, and the little all little