Famous Proverbs

1] It is as natural to die as to be born
2] Things past cannot be recalled
3] Four eyes see better than two.
4] He that is born a fool is never cured
5] More have repented speech than silence
6] He who is afraid of asking is ashamed of learning
7] It is an ill bird that fouls its own nest
8] A guilty conscience needs no accuser
9] Words fly, writings remain
10] The last straw breaks the camel’s back
11] Where bad’s the best, bad must be the choice
12] Better do a kindness near home than go to a temple far away to burn incense.
13] He stands not surely that never slips
14] What must be must be
15] Every one thinks his own sack heaviest
16] Everyone is a kin to the rich man
17] Poison is poison though it comes in a golden cup.
18] He who does not kill hogs, ill not get black puddings
19] You can’t clap with one hand
20] Novelty always appears handsome
21] A man’s in his own mouth stinks
22] He that tells a secret, is another’s servant.
23] Better be born lucky than wise.
24] When one door shuts, another opens
25] No honest man ever repented his honesty
26] No road is long with good company
27] The earthen pot must keep clear of the brass kettle
28] A joke never gains over an enemy, but often loses a friend
29] Learn weeping and you shall gain laughing
30] The road to hell is paved with good action
31] No man is born wise or learned
32] If you want a thing well done, do it yourself
33] He that tells his wife news, is but newly wed
34] Though a lie be swift the truth overtakes it
35] Men make houses, women make homes
36] Facts are stubborn things
37] The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world
38] Law makers should not be law breakers
39] Ill comes often on the back worse
40] They that value not praise, will never do anything worthy of praise
41] Wise men propose, and fools determine
42] Do not halloo till you are out of the wood
43] Despair gives courage to a coward
44] Beauty fades like a flower.
45] He is not fit to command others, that cannot command himself
46] If you agree to carry the calf, they’ll make you carry the cow.
47] Whether the pitcher strikes the stone, or the stone the pitcher, it is bad for the pitcher
48] Conscience is a thousand witnesses
49] More haste, less speed
50] Weeds need no sowing
51] Courtesy is the inseparable companion of virtue
52] Master easy, servant slack
53] No, thank you’ has lost you many a good butter-cake
54] Creditors have better memories than debtors
55] He is a good friend that speaks well of us behind our backs
56] Health is not value till sickness comes
57] In wine there is truth
58] When we sing, everybody hears us; when sigh, nobody hears us
59] A single arrow is easily broken, but not ten in a bundle.
60] A fool is ever dancing on the tip of his tongue
61] Laugh and grow fat
62] Nature is conquered by obeying her
63] A man must plough with such oxen as he has
64] Bear and forbear
65] Good advice (or counsel) is beyond price
66] No tie can oblige the perfidious
67] Many would be cowards, if they had courage enough
68] Full of courtesy, full of craft
69] It is easier to praise poverty than to bear it.
70] Better be first in a village than second at Rome
71] Hunger is the teacher of many
72] Never tell your enemy that your foot aches
73] Forgiveness is perfect when the sin is not remembered
74] A man apt to promise, is apt to forget
75] Give him (or knaves) an inch and he (they) will take a yard (or mile)
76] Oh, what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive!
77] The devil finds work for idle hands to do
78] Love is sweet torment
79] Do not triumph before the victory
80] Evil to him who evil thinks.
81] The hunchback does not see his own hump, but his companion’s
82] We never know the worth of water till the well is dry.
83] A house divided against itself cannot stand
84] You cannot catch old birds with chaff
85] Dry bread at home is better than roast meat abroad
86] One pair of heels is often worth two pairs of hands
87] Better to wear out than rust out
88] Burn not your house to rid it of the mouse.
89] Make haste slowly
90] So many countries, so many customs
91] Shame arises more from fear of men than of God
92] Calamity is the touchstone of a brave mind
93] She’s her father’s (or mother’s) daughter
94] Little and often fills the purse
95] The soldier who retreated fifty paces laughed at the one who had fallen back a hundred paces
96] Variety takes away satiety
97] Example is the greatest of all seducers
98] If you pile up enough sand, you can make a pagoda
99] When the ear will not listen, the heart escapes sorrow
100] Dreams go by contraries