Famous Proverbs

1] If the father is spotted, the son will be speckled
2] The longest night will have an end
3] Alms never make poor
4] When children stand quiet, they have done some ill.
5] Weak things united become strong
6] Familiarity breeds contempt
7] Love conquers all
8] Each day brings its own bread
9] Liars should have good memories
10] Away goes the devil when he finds the door shut against him
11] He that has a fellow-ruler, has an over-ruler. ¶ There is no good accord, where every man would be a lord
12] Thrift is a great revenue
13] The Friar Preached against stealing and had a goose in his sleeve
14] Adversity makes strange bedfellows
15] The wise forget an insult, as the ungrateful a kindness
16] Dress up a stick and it does not appear to be a stick
17] Do not wear out your welcome
18] Open a book and you profit by what you read
19] Who greases his way travels easily
20] It is a sorry flock where the ewe bears the bell
21] Quietness is a great treasure
22] An ill marriage is a spring of ill fortune
23] The pot calls the kettle black
24] Words have wings, and cannot be recalled
25] The darkest hour is that before the dawn
26] A secret fire is discovered by the smoke
27] Luck for fools and chance for the ugly
28] Empty vessels make the most noise
29] Curses, like chickens, come home to roost
30] Wisdom is better than strength
31] You know what you can do till you try.
32] Better go about than fall in to the ditch
33] The world is full of fools
34] Good merchandise finds a ready buyer
35] He knows the water best who has waded through it
36] A good reaper deserves a good sickle.
37] Never look a gift horse in the mouth.
38] Better a good cow than a cow of a good kind
39] You can be head a man but you can’t shut his mouth
40] Never tell your enemy that your foot aches
41] Pride is the mask of one’s own faults
42] The cobbler should stick to his last
43] Needs must when the evil drives
44] Many would be cowards, if they had courage enough
45] Because he would not eat it, the food got maggoty
46] A good heart cannot lie.
47] Fortune is blind
48] Reputation is often got without merit, and lost without crime
49] He’s his father’s (or mother’s) son
50] There is no place like home
51] The first day a guest, the second day a guest, the third day a calamity
52] Every beggar is descended from some king, and every king is descended from some beggar.
53] Covetousness breaks the sack
54] Jam tomorrow and jam yesterday – but never jam today
55] Eat at pleasure, drink by measure
56] The perfect good is the exercise of virtue
57] Love is lawless.
58] He that serves every body is paid by nobody
59] Learning makes a good man better and an ill man worse
60] He knows most who speaks least
61] Don’t cut off your nose to spite your face
62] Send a fool to France and he’ll come back a fool
63] It is a great victory that comes without blood
64] The pen is the tongue of the hand
65] It is good fishing in troubled waters
66] The way to a man’s heart is through his stomach
67] Wife and Children are bills of charges
68] He is a fool that kisses the maid when he may kiss the mistress
69] The bigger they are, the harder they fall
70] Those who are used to the signs of the dumb, understand them
71] If you gently touch a nettle, it’ll sting you for your pains; grasp it like a man of mettle, and it soft as silk remains.
72] Better be the head of a dog than the tail of a lion
73] The tongue breaks bone, and herself has none
74] If today will not, tomorrow may
75] Cowardice is afraid to be known or seen
76] Tender-handed stroke a nettle, and it stings you for your pain: grasp it like a man of mettle, and it soft as silk remains
77] He that falls today may rise tomorrow
78] When the cat is away, the mice will play
79] A word spoken is past recalling
80] Might overcome right.
81] He who sits chatting about nothing loses his candle
82] There is a black sheep in every flock
83] All work and no play makes jack a dull boy
84] The devil sometimes speaks the truth
85] You scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours
86] Better an open enemy than a false friend
87] Things are only worth one makes them worth
88] An obedient wife commands her husband
89] There is no blindness like ignorance
90] Virtue is the only true nobility
91] Good fame is better than a good face
92] A man of gladness seldom falls into madness
93] Dogs bark as they are bred.
94] Wine is the best broom for trouble
95] You win some, you lose some
96] Threatened folk live long
97] It is easier to capture a tiger in the hills than to ask for favours from a man
98] He that obey cannot command
99] Fine words dress ill deeds
100] What is shown by example, men think they may justly do