Famous Proverbs

1] Lookers-on see most of the game
2] A little is better than none
3] Prospect is often better than possession
4] When we have gold, we are in fear; when we have none we are in danger
5] The pitcher goes so often to me well that it is broken at last
6] A good conscience is a soft pillow
7] When we sing, everybody hears us; when sigh, nobody hears us
8] If you run after two hares, you will catch neither
9] The fox may grow grey, but never good
10] A thief passes for a gentle man when stealing has made him rich
11] Six feet of earth make all men equal
12] Sorrow will pay no debt
13] Man proposes, God disposes
14] It is ill sitting at Rome and striving against the pope
15] Beauty is in the eye of the beholder
16] The higher you climb, the harder you fall
17] Hard cases make bad law
18] No one betrays himself by silence
19] The best throw of the dice is to throw them away
20] When the word is out it belongs to another
21] Luck for fools and chance for the ugly
22] The falling drops hollow the stone
23] Don’t change horses in mid-stream
24] Not good is it to harp on the on the frayed string
25] Familiarity breeds contempt
26] Footprints on the sands of time are not made by sitting down
27] He is a gentleman that has gentle conditions
28] He thinks not well that thinks not again
29] Better to ask the way than go astray.
30] If the cap fits, wear it
31] He that touches pitch shall be defiled
32] Too many cooks spoil the broth
33] He that follows Nature , is never out of his way
34] There’s a time and place for everything
35] Sailors get their money like horses, and spend it like asses
36] Long looked for, comes at last
37] Better ask the way than go astray
38] Wine is one thing; drunkenness another
39] Truth lies at the bottom of the well
40] A willing helper does not wait until he is asked.
41] Let sleeping dogs lie
42] Give a servant a rod, and he’ll beat his master
43] Death does not recognize strength
44] Beauty is potent but money is omnipotent
45] Don’t cry before you are hurt
46] Long absent, soon forgotten
47] As long as the old horse lives, his habits will not change
48] Home is home though it be never so homely
49] Where grooms and householders are all alike great, very disastrous will it be for the houses and all that dwell in them
50] He that will thrive, must rise at five; he that has thriven, may lie till seven; but he that will never thrive may lie till eleven
51] Blood will have blood
52] Many eyes upon the king
53] Thatch your roof before the rain begins
54] Of evil manners, spring good laws
55] Kindness lies in one side of the house
56] Sour, sweet, bitter and pungent flavours must all be tasted
57] A liar is not believed when he speaks the truth
58] Where there’s muck, there’s money
59] Sooner begun, sooner done
60] It is good to follow the old fox
61] Without knowing the force of words, it is impossible to know the man
62] Put out your tubs when it is raining
63] You cannot skimp on the fodder and have an energetic horse.
64] There are more ways to the wood than one.
65] Hope is the last thing to abandon the unhappy
66] We don’t get something for nothing
67] Genius is an infinite capacity for taking pains.
68] The road to hell is paved with good action
69] A good beginning makes a good ending.
70] A good marksman may miss
71] Trusting often makes fidelity
72] He who holds the ladder is as bad as the thief
73] He who pays the piper calls the tune
74] Whom god loves, his house is sweet to him
75] A man should keep from the blind and give t his kin.
76] Deeds are fruits; words are but leaves
77] See how the wind blows
78] One must howl with the wolves
79] If you put noting into your purse, you can take nothing out
80] He that would catch fish must venture his bait
81] Possibilities are infinite
82] A fool may give a wise counsel. A fool’s bolt may sometimes hit the mark.
83] It is more blessed to give than to receive
84] Don’t cry for the moon
85] He seems wise with whom all things thrive
86] Good goods are not cheap; cheap goods are not good
87] Make hay while the sun shines
88] If wishes were horses, beggars would ride (or might ride)
89] When the horse has reached the brink of the precipice, it is too late to pull the reins.
90] Better never begin than never make an end
91] A trouble shared is a trouble halved.
92] He that blows best, bears away the horn
93] When I lent, I was a friend; and when I asked, I was unkind
94] Deeds are fruits; words are but leaves
95] Money talks
96] Courtesy on one side never lasts long
97] Self-preservation is the first law of nature
98] No man ever becomes thoroughly bad all at once
99] The poorer one is, the more devils one meets
100] Do not halloo till you are out of the wood