Famous Proverbs

1] An ounce of patience is worth a pound of brains
2] Every man for himself, and the devil take the hindmost
3] Don’t quarrel with your bread and buffer
4] Quickly come, quickly go
5] An honest good look covers many faults.
6] It is not the burden but the overburden that kills the beast
7] Love sees no fault
8] Corruption of the best becomes the worst
9] At the end of the game, you’ll see who’s the winner
10] Precept begins, examples accomplish
11] Better to ask the way than go astray.
12] He that repairs not a part, builds all
13] A forced kindness deserves no thanks
14] We do as we can, since we can’t do as we would
15] If at first you don’t succeed, try, try, try again
16] Good fame is better than a good face
17] Kindness to the good is better investment than kindness to the rich.
18] Error cannot be defended but by error
19] He that lives ill, fear follows him
20] Afflictions are sent to us by God for our good
21] He that has no money needs no purse
22] Valour would fight, but discretion would run away
23] It’s a long lane that has no turning
24] If today will not, tomorrow may
25] Poverty is not a crime
26] Green leaves enhance the charm of the peony flower
27] He that has nothing need fear to lose nothing
28] Knowledge humbles the great man, astonishes the common man and puffeth up the little man
29] It is the unexpected that always happens
30] Much meat, much malady
31] Servants will not be diligent, where the master’s negligent
32] Diseases are the price of ill pleasures
33] Poor men’s words have little weight
34] If the lad goes to the well against his will, either the can will break or the water will spill
35] A willful man will have his way
36] Grin and bear it
37] It at first you don’t succeed, try, try, try again
38] All cats are grey in the dark
39] A friend in need is a friend indeed
40] Forewarned, forearmed; to be prepared is half the victory
41] A good anvil does not fear the hammer
42] Things are seldom what they seem.
43] Poor men seek meat for their stomach; rich men stomach for their meat.
44] Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.
45] He that has a full purse never wanted a friend
46] Prove your friend ere you have need
47] How ever much you learn, you won’t know how to raise the dead
48] It is poor dog that is not worth the whistling
49] He that tells his wife news, is but newly wed
50] There is no royal road to learning
51] None so deaf as those that will not hear
52] He that speaks well, flights well
53] An ass endures his burden but not more than his burden
54] When one door shuts, another opens
55] The proud will sooner lose than ask the way
56] He that has a tongue in his head may find his way anywhere
57] Nothing is certain but the unforeseen
58] Too much hope deceives
59] Children speak only words they have heard.
60] A quarrelsome man has no good neighbours
61] Those who sell dog-meat often display a lamb’s head
62] He’s his father’s (or mother’s) son
63] A fool at forty is a fool indeed
64] Spit to the heavens, and spittle falls on your own nose
65] The beaten road is the safest
66] He that hath a wife and children hath given hostages to fortune
67] One cannot love and be wise
68] Don’t wash your dirty linen in public
69] There’s no great loss without some gain
70] A fault once denied is twice committed
71] When good cheer is lacking, our friends will be packing
72] They are rich who have true friends
73] If you would make an enemy, lend a man money and ask it of him again
74] One sheep follows another
75] Advice when most needed is least heeded
76] A blow with a word strikes deeper than a blow with a sword
77] A good drink makes the old young
78] A beggar can never be bankrupt
79] Every Jack must have his Jill
80] To err is human; to forgive, divine
81] Don’t cry for the moon
82] All things for not all persons
83] Courtesy is the inseparable companion of virtue
84] He knows most who speaks least
85] Nothing so bad in which there is not something of good
86] Don’t go near the water until you learn how to swim
87] Men count up the faults of those who keep them waiting
88] Better late than never, but better never late
89] A word before is worth two behind
90] Don’t meet trouble half-way
91] A traveller may lie with authority
92] Deliver your words not by number but by weight
93] Under the tongue, men are crushed to death
94] He who sits in the well to observe the sky does not see very much.
95] It is a foolish sheep that makes the wolf his confessor
96] Joy and sorrow are next door neighbours.
97] Man may have a thousand plans, but god’s plan is best
98] He may find fault that cannot mend
99] A old poacher makes the best gamekeeper
100] Empty vessels make the most sound