Famous Proverbs

1] It is a foolish bird that soils (or defiles ) its own nest
2] The tailor makes the man
3] It is easier to praise poverty than to bear it.
4] One foot is better than two crutches
5] Dumb dogs are dangerous
6] Death keeps no calendar
7] Every cock crows on his own dunghill
8] Between two stools you fall to the ground
9] Learning is like sailing against the tide - if you don’t move forward, you go backward
10] A barber learns to shave by shaving fools
11] He who holds the ladder is as bad as the thief
12] Many kiss the hand they wish to cut off
13] Human blood is all of a colour
14] A closed mouth catches no files
15] An ounce of mother is worth a ton of priest
16] His bark is worse than his bite
17] He conquers who endures
18] Diamond cuts diamond
19] Conscience is a thousand witnesses
20] Medical plants from one’s own back-yard are no valued.
21] A good Jack makes a good Jill.
22] It takes all sorts to make a world
23] Easter so longed for is gone in a day
24] Union (or Unity) is strength
25] The rich man thinks of the future, the poor man thinks of today
26] Honesty is ill to thrive by
27] The most high Good sees and bears; me neighbour knows, nothing, and yet is always finding fault.
28] Love knows hidden paths
29] Set a beggar on horse back and he’ll ride to the devil
30] Kindness to the good is better investment than kindness to the rich.
31] Where your will is ready, your feet are light
32] Don’t judge any man until you have walked two moons in his moccasins.
33] He who last, laughs longest.
34] Save a thief from the gallows and he’ll cut your throat
35] Unless the vessel is clean, what you pour in to it turns sour.
36] He that sleeps sound feels not the toothache
37] Love is blind
38] The best wine comes from an old vessel
39] Ill comes often on the back worse
40] Never hit a man when he’s down
41] When it pleases not God, the saint can do little
42] The wisest of the wise may err.
43] Little wealth, little care
44] If wishes were butter cakes, beggars might bite
45] One speak of rat droppings will spoil a whole pan of rice
46] What is the good of a sundial in the shade?
47] The garment worn determines how one is served
48] He that will steal a pin will steal a better thing
49] A lion may come to be beholden to a mouse
50] If anything can go wrong, it will
51] Old age doesn’t protect from folly
52] The pot calls the kettle black
53] He who does not rise with the sun does not enjoy the day
54] It is a sad house where the hen crows louder than the cock
55] Habit is second nature
56] Point not at other’s spots with a foul finger
57] The anvil lasts longer than the hammer
58] They bow to you when borrowing; you bow to them when collecting
59] A word is enough to the wise
60] Give him (or knaves) an inch and he (they) will take a yard (or mile)
61] Pardoning the bad is injuring the good
62] Why play music for a deal man or dance for a blind man?
63] A goose quill is more dangerous than a lion’s paw
64] Best is cheapest
65] Every light has its shadow
66] Through hardship to the stars
67] A good anvil does not fear the hammer
68] Good riding at two anchors, men have told, for if one breaks the other may hold
69] The pitcher goes often to the well that it is broken at last
70] Misery acquaints men with strange bedfellows
71] A curse will not strike out an eye unless a fist goes with it
72] Will without reason is blind, and against reason, is mad
73] Coming events cast their shadows before
74] You know what you can do till you try.
75] Rich folk have many friends
76] He who excuses himself accuses himself
77] Hasty climbers have sudden falls
78] There’s no place like home
79] It is late to cover the well when the child is drowned.
80] The earthen pot must keep clear of the brass kettle
81] It is n time to stoop when the head is off.
82] Seeing is believing
83] If the father is a tiger, the son cannot be a dog.
84] Health without money is half an ague
85] Wisdom is neither inheritance nor legacy
86] Many a little makes a mickle
87] Rust wastes more than use
88] The way to a man’s heart is through his stomach
89] No misfortune will go on forever
90] Every oak has been an acorn
91] Law makers should not be law breakers
92] The fine pullet shows its excellence from the egg.
93] He who cannot bear misfortune is truly unfortunate.
94] In all the weeding cake, hope is the sweetest plum.
95] It is a poor kin that has neither whore nor thief in it
96] He’s his father’s (or mother’s) son
97] When a man grows angry, his reason rides out.
98] Cease to hope and you will cease to fear.
99] Don’t cry stinking fish
100] It is an ill sign to see a fox lick a lamb