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Proverbs
English Proverbs
English Proverbs
(1504 Proverbs)
He that puts on a public gown must put off a private person.
(English Proverb)
He who has carried the calf will be able by and by to carry the ox.
(English Proverb)
He's all hat and no cattle.
(English Proverb)
Human blood is all of a color.
(English Proverb)
Every disease will have its course.
(English Proverb)
Fair words will not make the pot boil.
(English Proverb)
For want of a nail a kingdom was lost.
(English Proverb)
God help the rich man, let the poor man beg.
(English Proverb)
Grace will last, beauty will blast.
(English Proverb)
He is not wise that is not wise for himself.
(English Proverb)
He that cheateth in small things is a fool, but in great things is a rogue.
(English Proverb)
He that is once born, once must die.
(English Proverb)
He that rises late, must trot all day.
(English Proverb)
He who has no charity, deserves no mercy.
(English Proverb)
High places have their precipices.
(English Proverb)
Hunger is the best spice.
(English Proverb)
Every man will have his own turn served.
(English Proverb)
Faith sees by the ears.
(English Proverb)
Forced put is no choice.
(English Proverb)
God help the rich, the poor can look after themselves.
(English Proverb)
Gray hairs are death's early blossoms.
(English Proverb)
He is the best general who makes the fewest mistakes.
(English Proverb)
He that endures is not overcome.
(English Proverb)
He that is too proud to ask is too good to receive.
(English Proverb)
He that seeks a horse or a wife without fault, has neither steed in his stable nor angel in his bed.
(English Proverb)
He who last, lasts, laughs last.
(English Proverb)
His bark is worse than his bite.
(English Proverb)
Hunger makes good kitchen.
(English Proverb)
Every one thinks his sack heaviest.
(English Proverb)
Faith without works is dead.
(English Proverb)
Fortune is blind.
(English Proverb)
God is better pleased with adverbs than with nouns.
(English Proverb)
Great minds think alike, but fools seldom differ.
(English Proverb)
He is wise that has wit enough for his own affairs.
(English Proverb)
He that enquires all opinions, comes ill speed.
(English Proverb)
He that knows thee will never buy thee.
(English Proverb)
He that seeks trouble never misses.
(English Proverb)
He who lives according to nature will never be poor, and he who lives according to opinion will never be rich.
(English Proverb)
History never repeats itself, but it does rhyme.
(English Proverb)
Idle folks have the least leisure.
(English Proverb)
Everyone is weary: the poor in seeking, the rich in keeping, the good in learning.
(English Proverb)
Favour will surely perish as life.
(English Proverb)
Fortune is weary to carry one and the same man always.
(English Proverb)
God is dead.
(English Proverb)
Green leaves and brown leaves fall from the same tree.
(English Proverb)
He is wise that is honest.
(English Proverb)
He that fights and runs away, lives to fight another day.
(English Proverb)
He that labours is tempted by one devil; he that is idle is tempted by a thousand.
(English Proverb)
He that sows trusts in god.
(English Proverb)
He who pays the piper may call the tune.
(English Proverb)
Home is home, though it be never so homely.
(English Proverb)
Everyone must row with the oars they have.
(English Proverb)
Fear lends wings.
(English Proverb)
Fourty Two is the answer.
(English Proverb)
God looks to clean hands, not to full ones.
(English Proverb)
Habbit is a second nature.
(English Proverb)
He is wise that is ware in time.
(English Proverb)
He that gapes until he be fed, well may he gape till he be dead.
(English Proverb)
He that laughs when he is alone will make sport in company.
(English Proverb)
He that speaks ill of the mare would buy her.
(English Proverb)
He who sleeps forgets his hunger.
(English Proverb)
Home is where the heart is.
(English Proverb)
A dog's nose and a maid's knee are always cold.
(English Proverb)
A good payer will not object to leaving a deposit.
(English Proverb)
A little knowledge is dangerous. Drink deep, or taste not the puritan waters.
(English Proverb)
A man without a wife is but half a man.
(English Proverb)
A pot of milk is ruined by a drop of poison.
(English Proverb)
A trodden path bears no grass.
(English Proverb)
All covet, all lose.
(English Proverb)
Always to court and never to wed is the happiest life that ever was led.
(English Proverb)
An unfortunate man would be drowned in a tea-cup.
(English Proverb)
Base terms are bellows to a slackening fire.
(English Proverb)
Better bend the back than bruise the forehead.
(English Proverb)
Beware beginnings.
(English Proverb)
Butter is gold in the morning, silver at noon, lead at night.
(English Proverb)
Cold pudding settles love.
(English Proverb)
Delays are not denials.
(English Proverb)
Don't have too many irons in the fire.
(English Proverb)
Eat when you're hungry, and drink when you're dry.
(English Proverb)
A drunken man is always dry.
(English Proverb)
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