Famous Proverbs

1] Look at the bright side
2] It is easy to get a thousand prescriptions but hard to find a cure.
3] No man limps because another is hurt
4] No wrong without a remedy
5] Once a use and ever a custom
6] Weak things united become strong
7] Take the tone of the company you are in
8] The race is got by running
9] Corn him well and he will work better
10] Man does what he can, and God what he will
11] Hard words break no bones
12] Even the tiger will appear if you talk about him
13] He who holds the ladder is as bad as the thief
14] Ask no question and you’ll be told no lies
15] He that tells his wife news, is but newly wed
16] Don’t take your harp to the party
17] Plain dealing is best. Plain dealing is a jewel
18] Keep some till further more come
19] Worse things happen at sea
20] He that tells a secret, is another’s servant.
21] Death alone can kill hope
22] The Pen is mightier than the sword
23] When the word is out it belongs to another
24] Valour would fight, but discretion would run away
25] He who pays the piper calls the tune
26] He that serves every body is paid by nobody
27] A good servant should never be in the way and never out of the way
28] The proud will sooner lose than ask the way
29] The good die young.
30] Easy come, easy go
31] A dwarf on a giant’s shoulders sees the farther of the two
32] The tongue is not steel, yet it cuts
33] Wine and wenches empty men’s purses
34] Many a true word is spoken in jest
35] Mischief comes by the pound and goes away by the ounce
36] It is no use spoiling the ship for a half penny worth of tar
37] He is not laughed at the laughs at himself first
38] The devil looks after his own
39] A blow with a word strikes deeper than a blow with a sword
40] It is easier to commend poverty than endure it.
41] Honest men marry soon, wise men not at all
42] Don’t kick against the pricks
43] Virtue and happiness are mother and daughter
44] Truth has a good face but bad clothes
45] Good to begin well, better to end well.
46] Adversity makes strange bedfellows
47] Time flies
48] The mob has many heads but no brains
49] Many hands make light work
50] Once a knave, always a knave
51] Better the last smile than the first laugh
52] Manners make the man
53] The company makes the feast
54] Kindness to the good is better investment than kindness to the rich.
55] After a storm comes a calm
56] Plain dealing is a jewel
57] Love cannot be compelled
58] Give us the tools, and we will finish the job
59] Of one ill come many
60] A horse that will not carry a saddle must have no oats.
61] Adventures are to be adventurous
62] He thinks not well that thinks not again
63] He who waits for another man’s platter has a cold meal
64] Drunkards and fools cannot lie.
65] Do not kick against the pricks
66] A good wife makes a good husband
67] No good building without a good foundation.
68] Adam’s ale is the best brew
69] If wishes were butter cakes, beggars might bite
70] Long roads test the horse; long dealings test the friend
71] Easier said than done
72] Every beggar is descended from some king, and every king is descended from some beggar.
73] Work expands so as to fill the time available
74] The labourer is worthy of his hire
75] Love your neighbour, yet pull not down your hedge
76] A hungry man is angry man
77] Water is a boon in the desert, but the drowning man curses it.
78] The first day a guest, the second day a guest, the third day a calamity
79] True doctrines require no miracles
80] Fear of death is worse than death itself
81] A man of gladness seldom falls into madness
82] Hope keeps man alive
83] Why play music for a deal man or dance for a blind man?
84] Zeal is fit only for wise men, but is found mostly in fools
85] It is ill jesting with edged tools
86] Don’t take a bull in to a china shop.
87] A little body often harbours a great soul
88] Business is business
89] A prophet is without honour in his own country
90] Nothing so bad as not to be good for something
91] He that dwells next door to a cripple, will learn to halt
92] Hope is the last thing to abandon the unhappy
93] If you have no honey in your pot, have some in your mouth.
94] If Jack’s in love, he’s no judge of Jill’s beauty
95] A good word stills great anger
96] Cross the stream where it is shallowest
97] He who handles a nettle tenderly is soonest stung
98] In peace, prepare for war
99] The cobbler should stick to his last
100] Novelty always appears handsome