Famous Proverbs

1] Sorrow will pay no debt
2] True gold is not transformed by fire
3] The fowler’s pipe sounds sweet till the bird is caught.
4] Laugh before breakfast, you’ll cry before supper
5] The righteous man sins before an open chest
6] Every man has his price
7] The perfect good is the exercise of virtue
8] The ass loaded with gold still eats thistles
9] Truth is mighty and will prevail
10] Borrowed garments never fit well
11] He who hesitates is lost
12] As you sow, so shall you reap
13] The road to hell is paved with good action
14] A fair face may hide a foul heart.
15] Hope keeps man alive
16] When you do not know what to do – wait.
17] Care killed the cat
18] Plain dealing is a jewel, but they that use it die beggars
19] You know what you can do till you try.
20] The death of the wolves is the safety of the sheep
21] He that has a tongue in his head may find his way anywhere
22] The rich knows not who is his friend
23] The young will sow their wild oats
24] Good riding at two anchors, men have told, for if one breaks the other may hold
25] Enquire not what boils in another’s pot. ¶ Listeners seldom hear good of themselves
26] In a clam sea, every man is a pilot
27] The joy of the heart makes the face fair.
28] Pardon one offence and you encourage many
29] A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
30] Enough is as good as a feast
31] Praise without profit puts little in the pot
32] Sour, sweet, bitter and pungent flavours must all be tasted
33] Little pitchers have big ears.
34] He that comes of a hen, must scrape
35] The exception proves the rule
36] We have all been once in our life
37] Exceptional bravery is often hidden under a cloak of timidity
38] Envy is the sorrow of fools.
39] He is not laughed at the laughs at himself first
40] Custom makes all things easy
41] Laugh and grow fat
42] Not even Hercules could contend against two
43] The worth of a thing is what it will bring
44] The king can do no wrong
45] All’s grist that comes to the mill.
46] It is good sheltering under an old hedge
47] The eye of the master will do more work than both his hands
48] Punctuality is the politeness of kings.
49] It is easier to raise the devil than to lay him
50] A good reaper deserves a good sickle.
51] Before you marry, be sure of a house wherein to tarry
52] Give me fire and I’ll give you light
53] Love rules without a sword, and binds without a cord
54] It at first you don’t succeed, try, try, try again
55] No one is rich enough to do without his neighbours
56] No tie can oblige the perfidious
57] Adam’s ale is the best brew
58] As you brew, so shall you drink.
59] As long as the old horse lives, his habits will not change
60] Even the compelling beauty of the Diamond Mountain cannot be appreciated when the stomach is empty
61] The last drop makes the cup run over
62] Nothing venture (or ventured), nothing gain (or gained)
63] Crows are all completely black
64] It is well to live that one may learn
65] It is ill sitting at Rome and striving against the pope
66] Let us do evil that good may come
67] A hungry man smells meat afar off
68] The bigger they are, the harder they fall
69] Arms bend inwards – not outwards.
70] The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak
71] The healthful man can give counsel to the sick
72] Time flies
73] You cannot make a crab walk straight
74] Business is business
75] Grief pent up will break the heart
76] Give and take is fair play
77] The longest (or farthest) way round is the nearest (or shortest) way home.
78] Pinch the right thigh and the left will feel the pain too.
79] Corn him well and he will work better
80] It is easier to pull down than to build
81] He who comes first, grinds first.
82] He has to do what is foul, never comes away clean
83] The more laws, the more offenders
84] He who can wait obtains what he wishes.
85] Hungry dogs will eat dirty puddings
86] Time and tide wait for no man
87] He who last, laughs longest.
88] Ask a silly question and you’ll get a silly answer.
89] A rich man’s joke is always funny
90] Have but few friends, though many acquaintances
91] Curses, like chickens, come home to roost
92] A good servant must have good wages
93] Virtue is the only true nobility
94] The falling drops hollow the stone
95] He who sows, trusts in God
96] A discontented man knows not where to sit easy
97] It is a great victory that comes without blood
98] Anger restrained is wisdom gained
99] Have but few friends, though many acquaintances
100] Burn not your house to rid it of the mouse.