Famous Proverbs

1] Zeal without knowledge is a runaway horse
2] A chain is no stronger than its weakest link
3] Had I fish’ was never good with garlic
4] There is no rose without a thorn
5] It is equally an error to trust all men or no man
6] Jackdaw always perches by jackdaw.
7] A growing youth has a wolf in his belly
8] Prosperity makes friends, adversity tries them
9] The great fish eat up the small
10] Nothing so bad as not to be good for something
11] In wine there is truth
12] Experience must be bought
13] Local ginger is never as hot as imported ginger
14] One good deed makes up for a thousand bad ones.
15] Good goods are not cheap; cheap goods are not good
16] A good paymaster never wants workmen
17] Every law has a loophole
18] A good wife is a good prize
19] He that hath a wife and children hath given hostages to fortune
20] You are never too old to learn
21] It is better to have done something great than to have never been successful
22] He who does not kill hogs, ill not get black puddings
23] Men count up the faults of those who keep them waiting
24] The mill cannot grind with water that is past
25] God comes with leaden feet, but strikes with iron hands
26] When a dwarf ascends a staircase, he gets higher every step
27] They brag most who can do least
28] A bad excuse is better than none at all
29] Bold resolution is the favourite of providence
30] The mob has many heads but no brains
31] There is many a good tune played on an old fiddle
32] Much learning makes men mad
33] Marriage is a lottery
34] Law cannot persuade where it cannot punish
35] Where there are reeds, there is water
36] It will be the same a hundred years hence
37] The ass loaded with gold still eats thistles
38] No man is born wise or learned
39] Silence is golden
40] He that ventures not fails not.
41] It is easy to bear the misfortunes of others
42] What one loses (or you lose) on the swings, one makes up (or you gain) on the roundabouts
43] Beauty is eloquent even when silent
44] Every cloud has a silver lining
45] A good Jack makes a good Jill.
46] Health is great riches
47] A merry companion is a wagon on the way
48] A hungry man is angry man
49] If youth knew what age would crave. It would both get and save
50] Wrong has no warrant
51] Lend only that which you can afford to lose
52] Moderation in all things
53] The death of the wolves is the safety of the sheep
54] Seeing is believing
55] He that demands misses not, unless his demands be foolish
56] Virtue joints man to god
57] Corruption of the best becomes the worst
58] There are more men threatened than stricken
59] Shame arises more from fear of men than of God
60] Hunger is the teacher of many
61] Much babbling is not without offence
62] He is not poor that has little, but he that desires much
63] There are more ways to the wood than one.
64] Those that make the best use of their time, have none to spare
65] Marry in haste, repent at leisure
66] When meat is in anger is out
67] Every Jack must have his Jill
68] Ask a silly question and you’ll get a silly answer.
69] To fright a bird is not the way to catch her
70] What the fool does in the end, the wise man does at the beginning
71] No man fears what he has seen grow
72] The worse luck now, the better another time
73] Love knows no limit
74] Fortune knocks once at everyone’s door (or gate)
75] Every tub must stand on its own bottom
76] Honest men marry soon, wise men not at all
77] A friend in need is a friend indeed
78] A single rose does not mean spring
79] God tempers that wind to the shorn lamb
80] A true man and a thief think not the same
81] Diamond cuts diamond
82] Better sit still than rise and fall
83] There’s no such thing as free as a free lunch
84] Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown
85] Those who are used to the signs of the dumb, understand them
86] A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
87] If you have no honey in your pot, have some in your mouth.
88] When two elephants struggle, it is the grass that suffers
89] If every man would sweep before his own door, the city would soon be clean
90] Wine does not intoxicate men; men intoxicate themselves
91] Past cure, past care
92] He that would eat the kernel must crack the nut
93] A man may bear till his back breaks
94] Woes unite foes
95] Drunkards and fools cannot lie.
96] What costs little is little esteemed
97] He who sows, trusts in God
98] Mirth without measure is madness
99] An Englishman’s home is his castle
100] Great barkers are no biters