Famous Proverbs

1] Ill gotten, ill spent
2] Eat a clove of garlic and you smell of garlic; eat two cloves and you smell the same.
3] He is a fool that kisses the maid when he may kiss the mistress
4] Do it now
5] He travels the fastest who travels alone
6] Books and friends should be few but good
7] When the butcher has already killed your pig, it is useless to discuss with him the price
8] A great city, a great solitude
9] Past cure, past care
10] Work expands so as to fill the time available
11] Haste is of (or from) the devil
12] Whether the pitcher strikes the stone, or the stone the pitcher, it is bad for the pitcher
13] The last straw breaks the camel’s back
14] Cruelty is more cruel, if we defer the pain
15] Nothing seek, nothing find
16] Marry in haste, repent at leisure
17] He that makes himself a sheep, shall be eaten by the wolf
18] Genius is an infinite capacity for taking pains.
19] All men are mortal
20] The proud will sooner lose than ask the way
21] Reputation is often got without merit, and lost without crime
22] What is brought by the wind will be carried away by the wind
23] Where there is peace, there is blessing
24] Good merchandise finds a ready buyer
25] He that loveth danger shall perish therein
26] Mustard is a good sauce, but mirth is better
27] Men do more things through habit than reason
28] Who greases his way travels easily
29] There is a black sheep in every flock
30] Like mistress, like maid
31] Wine uncloaks the words of the heart
32] Thatch your roof before the rain begins
33] Do leaves sprout on rootless trees?
34] Past cure, past care
35] The righteous man sins before an open chest
36] Every lot is to be overcome by endurance
37] It is better to conceal one’s knowledge than to reveal one’s ignorance
38] It is no use spoiling the ship for a half penny worth of tar
39] Facts are stubborn things
40] The pitcher goes often to the well that it is broken at last
41] God is always on the side of the big battalions
42] Courtesy is the inseparable companion of virtue
43] Money refused loses its brightness
44] No man can serve two masters
45] Truth has a good face but bad clothes
46] Ill news comes often on the back of worse
47] The more a man dreams, the less he believes
48] First thrive then wive
49] If each would sweep before his own door, we should have a clean city
50] Children pick up words as pigeons peas, and utter than again as god shall please
51] Desires are nourished by delays
52] There is nothing lost by civility
53] Morning dreams come true
54] So many countries, so many customs
55] Judge not, that ye be not judged
56] Those that make the best use of their time, have none to spare
57] Fortune favours those who use their judgement
58] The heart soon forgets what the eye sees not
59] A light purse makes a heavy heart
60] Liars should have good memories
61] Think on the end before you begin
62] 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
63] A whip for a fool, and a rod for a school, is always in good seasons
64] Blessed is he who excepts nothing, for he shall never be disappointed
65] Lend never that thing you needed most
66] The hunchback does not see his own hump, but his companion’s
67] The mill cannot grind with water that is past
68] It is misery enough to have once been happy
69] God never sends mouths but he sent meat
70] A man can die but once
71] A man may bear till his back breaks
72] Fear the Greeks (or Beware of Greeks) bearing gifts
73] A good horse cannot wear two saddles
74] God rejoices when one beggar scratches another
75] Charity begins at home.
76] Adam’s ale is the best brew
77] The little cannot be great unless he devours many
78] An occasion lost cannot be redeemed
79] Curiosity killed the cat.
80] Friendship should not be all on one side
81] When the horse has reached the brink of the precipice, it is too late to pull the reins.
82] You cannot make bricks without straw
83] Open a book and you profit by what you read
84] Everybody’s business is nobody’s business
85] Fear the Greeks (or Beware of Greeks) bearing gifts
86] The cord breaks t last by the weakest pull
87] Cross the stream where it is shallowest
88] One is never too old to learn
89] Every groom is a king at home
90] Blood is thicker than water
91] Cheats never prosper
92] Desert and reward seldom keep company
93] What has been, may be
94] Like father, like son
95] Better late than never, but better never late
96] Adam’s ale is the best brew
97] Needs must when the evil drives
98] Though the food is plain, stomach may be filled; though the cloth is coarse, one may be clad to a ripe old age
99] If it were not for hope, the heart would break
100] A good dog deserves a good bone