Famous Proverbs

1] A learned man has always riches in himself
2] He should have (or He needs) a long spoon who sups with the devil
3] Never too late to learn
4] Tell the truth and shame the devil
5] What is worse than ill luck?
6] It is ill striving (or swimming) against the stream (or tide)
7] He knows the water best who has waded through it
8] Distance lends enchantment to the view
9] It is too late to call back yesterday
10] Good counsel has no price. Nothing is given so freely as advice.
11] An hour in the morning is worth two in the evening
12] Ready money is ready medicine
13] He that will eat the kernel, must crack the nut
14] Easter so longed for is gone in a day
15] Tender-handed stroke a nettle, and it stings you for your pain: grasp it like a man of mettle, and it soft as silk remains
16] God’ s mill grids slow but sure
17] While there is life, there is hope
18] Deliver your words not by number but by weight
19] Goods that are much on show lose their colour
20] The remedy for injuries is not to remember them
21] It is easy to move rivers and mountains, but difficult to change a person’s basic nature
22] He who has a mind to beat his dog will easily find a stick.
23] In the land of hope there is never any winter
24] Blessed is he who excepts nothing, for he shall never be disappointed
25] All our pomp the earth covers
26] Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.
27] It is a great victory that comes without blood
28] By falling we learn to go safely
29] A fool’s bolt may sometimes hit the mark
30] None are so fond of secrets as those who don’t mean to keep them
31] Honesty is the best policy
32] In vain they rise early that used to rise late
33] A bribe will enter without knocking
34] Misfortunes find their way even on the darkest night
35] No pot so ugly as not to find a cover
36] He that sows thistles shall reap prickles.
37] Give a servant a rod, and he’ll beat his master
38] Don’t cry before you are hurt
39] A good Conscience is the best divinity
40] No like is the same.
41] He who would catch fish must not mind getting wet.
42] Almost’ never killed a fly.
43] No wrong without a remedy
44] No man limps because another is hurt
45] Eaten bread is soon forgotten
46] Clean and whole makes poor clothes shine.
47] Ignorance is the peace of life
48] Do right and fear no man
49] He that ventures not fails not.
50] We always weaken whatever we exaggerate
51] Do unto others as they should do unto you
52] Ill news comes often on the back of worse
53] The best is often the enemy of the good
54] Faint heart never won fair lady
55] God forgives sins, otherwise heaven would be empty.
56] Rome was not (or cannot be) built in a day
57] Despair gives courage to a coward
58] The ass that brays most eats
59] Time lost cannot be recalled
60] Silence is golden
61] History repeats itself
62] No pain, no cure
63] He that is fallen cannot help him that is down
64] A jack of all traders is master of none
65] The rich knows not who is his friend
66] A fault confessed is half redressed
67] Two blacks do not make a white
68] Brevity is the soul of wit
69] Long absent, soon forgotten
70] Adversity comes with instruction in its hand
71] Better ask the way than go astray
72] A good conscience is a sure card
73] Little wealth, little care
74] No flying without wings.
75] All for one, and one for all.
76] His own ingenuity pricks him.
77] A word is enough to the wise
78] Old foxes want no tutors
79] The least boy always carries the greatest fiddle
80] There is no royal road to learning
81] Everybody’s business is nobody’s business
82] Don’t put all your eggs in one basket
83] Mischief comes by the pound and goes away by the ounce
84] A child can have too much of his mother’s blessings
85] Fear of death is worse than death itself
86] He that has nothing need fear to lose nothing
87] Win a good reputation, and sleep at your ease
88] Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof
89] Will is no skill
90] The rotten apple injures its neighbours.
91] A man’s in his own mouth stinks
92] Dreams go by contraries
93] As well be hanged for a sheep as for a lamp
94] Dry bread at home is better than roast meat abroad
95] Words fly, writings remain
96] What we have seen with out own eyes is very much but what we have not seen is infinite.
97] It is profound ignorance that inspires the dogmatic tone
98] 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
99] Patience is a plaster for all sores
100] Misfortunes never come singly