Famous Proverbs

1] Like mistress, like maid
2] Many eyes upon the king
3] A man whose conscience is clear, of a knock at midnight has no fear
4] He travels the fastest who travels alone
5] A little learning is dangerous thing
6] Every family has a skeleton in the cupboard
7] From hearing, comes wisdom; from speaking, repentance
8] Kindness to the good is better investment than kindness to the rich.
9] Never put off till tomorrow what may be done today
10] The kind-hearted person has a heavy load.
11] When the cat is away, the mice will play
12] All’s grist that comes to the mill.
13] I may not have tasted their flesh but I’ve seen enough to know how pigs walk
14] There is truth in wine
15] It is not work that kills but worry
16] The good is often the enemy of the best
17] The submitting to one wrong brings on another
18] It is never too late to mend
19] If we have not the world’s wealth, we have the world’s ease
20] No honest man ever repented his honesty
21] One needs a full stomach to keep the precepts
22] A fault confessed is half redressed
23] Steer not after every mariner’s direction
24] All is fair in love and war
25] The proof of the pudding lies in the eating
26] Nature hates all sudden changes
27] If two men ride on a horse, one must ride behind
28] A bad workman quarrels with his tools.
29] Hasty climbers have sudden falls
30] Plain dealing is best
31] Health without money is half an ague
32] Poison is poison though it comes in a golden cup.
33] He who owes is in all the wrong
34] The eye sees only what it has the power of seeing
35] Pat any man and dust will fly
36] Where your will is ready, your feet are light
37] When the melon is ripe, it will drop by itself
38] Jesters do oft prove prophets
39] First catch your hare
40] Novelty always appears handsome
41] Put out your tubs when it is raining
42] What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander
43] Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me
44] That voyage never has luck where each one has a vote.
45] It is useless to flog a dead horse
46] He that goes a borrowing goes a-sorrowing
47] An ounce of patience is worth a pound of brains
48] Do not cut down the tree that gives you shade
49] Like will to like
50] All things require skills but an appetite
51] Diamond cuts diamond
52] The death of the wolves is the safety of the sheep
53] Pursuits become habits
54] A good name is sooner lost than won
55] A fault confessed is half redressed
56] When one door shuts, another opens
57] The higher you climb, the harder you fall
58] Half a word is enough for a wise man
59] In indecision itself, grief is present.
60] There is nothing new under the sun
61] Blood cannot be washed out with blood
62] One hour today is worth two tomorrow
63] Footprints on the sands of time are not made by sitting down
64] You cannot sell the cow and sup the milk
65] If you deal with a fox, think of his tricks
66] Do as most men do, then most men well speak well of you
67] There is more than one way to skin a cat.
68] Better late than never, but better never late
69] He that praises himself, spatters himself
70] Diligence is the mother of good fortune
71] There’s no fence against ill fortune.
72] It at first you don’t succeed, try, try, try again
73] No one is rich enough to do without his neighbours
74] All things are easy, that are done willingly
75] Good riding at two anchors, men have told, for if one breaks the other may hold
76] It is a foolish bird that soils (or defiles ) its own nest
77] What’s the good of thatching someone else’s roof?
78] Sorrow will pay no debt
79] Precepts may lead but examples draw
80] Evil often triumphs but never conquers.
81] Don’t count your chickens before they are hatched
82] It is well to live that one may learn
83] Ask no question and you’ll be told no lies
84] Health and wealth create beauty
85] Fine words dress ill deeds
86] By doing nothing, we learn to do ill
87] A lion may be beholden to a mouse
88] A man must plough with such oxen as he has
89] Great hopes make great men
90] Half a word is enough for a wise man
91] The calmest husbands make the stormiest wives
92] Thieves and rogues have the best luck, if they do but escape hanging
93] A great calligrapher isn’t choosy about his brushes.
94] In peace, prepare for war
95] Borrowed garments never fit well
96] The grapes are sour’, as the fox said when he could not reach them
97] Many drops make a shower
98] The poor suffer all the wrong
99] Poor men’s words have little weight
100] Words fly, writings remain