Famous Proverbs

1] All good things must come to an end
2] All for one, and one for all.
3] Misfortune does not always come to injure
4] Eat at pleasure, drink by measure
5] Learn to walk before you run
6] We should publish our joys and conceal our griefs
7] Lightning never strikes twice in the same place
8] One pair of heels is often worth two pairs of hands
9] The tailor makes the man
10] There are hills, and there are swamps as well.
11] Facts are stubborn things
12] Don’t wear out (or outstay) your welcome
13] There are more ways to the wood than one.
14] He that dare not venture must not complain of ill luck
15] Virtue is its own reward
16] A man’s wealth is his enemy
17] The greater the kindred, the less the kindness.
18] Win a good reputation, and sleep at your ease
19] It is as hard to please a knave as knight
20] He that praises himself, spatters himself
21] Train the child in the way he should go.
22] All covet all lose.
23] A good husband makes a good wife
24] Virtue is praised by all, but practiced by few
25] A fool may give a wise man counsel
26] An old man’s sayings are seldom untrue
27] In vain they rise early that used to rise late
28] When the dog catches mice, it is meddling in the cat’s business.
29] Every man has his faults
30] There are spots even in the sun
31] A good wife makes a good husband
32] When misfortune sleeps, let no one wake her
33] Marriages are made in heaven
34] Words bind men
35] Even if you wash a crow with rose- water, its feathers won’t become white.
36] Had I fish’ was never good with garlic
37] If there were no clouds, we should not enjoy the sun
38] Pleasure has a sting in its tail
39] Wisdom is neither inheritance nor legacy
40] Respect is greater from a distance
41] Kill two birds with one stone
42] He that will not go over the stile, must be thrust through the gate
43] Forbidden fruit is sweetest
44] Take things as they come
45] He who peeps through a hole, may see what will vex him
46] You may have too much of a good thing
47] Forecast is better than work-hard
48] Out of sight, out of mind
49] A good conscience is a sure card
50] Beauty fades like a flower.
51] A wise man cares not for what he cannot have
52] Truth is mighty and will prevail
53] One today is worth two tomorrows
54] Friendship should not be all on one side
55] A bad excuse is better than none at all
56] Full of courtesy, full of craft
57] Love is blind
58] Nothing is so bad but might have been worse
59] War, hunting and love are as full of trouble as pleasure
60] Punctuality is the politeness of kings.
61] To err is human; to forgive, divine
62] You cannot put a quart into a pint pot
63] Don’t ride the high horse
64] All our pomp the earth covers
65] As soon as there is life there is danger
66] Catch your bear before you sell its skin
67] Stolen pleasures are sweetest
68] Travel with open eyes and you will become a scholar
69] The longest day must have an end
70] He that serves well need not be afraid to ask his wages
71] Of one ill come many
72] Diamond cuts diamond
73] The love of money is the root of all evil
74] Patch by patch is good housewifery, but patch upon patch is plain beggary
75] Use the means, and God will give the blessings
76] Fish begins to stink at the head
77] Great oaks from little acorns grow
78] It is a foolish bird that soils (or defiles ) its own nest
79] Jackdaw always perches by jackdaw.
80] Out of sight, out of mind
81] Wine and wenches empty men’s purses
82] Remove an old tree and it will wither to death
83] Learning is like sailing against the tide - if you don’t move forward, you go backward
84] There is no fool like an old fool
85] A drowning man will clutch at a straw
86] You cannot sell the cow and sup (or drink) the milk
87] Set a beggar on horse back and he’ll ride to the devil
88] The calmest husbands make the stormiest wives
89] The hunchback does not see his own hump, but his companion’s
90] Enquire not what boils in another’s pot. ¶ Listeners seldom hear good of themselves
91] They brag most who can do least
92] There is nothing like being on the safe side
93] Three helping one another, bear the burthen of six.
94] Vast chasms can be filled, but the heart of man never
95] Long looked for, comes at last
96] Children speak only words they have heard.
97] He who serves is not free
98] Too much cunning undoes
99] If you would make an enemy, lend a man money and ask it of him again
100] He that has plenty of goods will have more