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Proverbs
English Proverbs
English Proverbs
(1504 Proverbs)
A good lawyer makes a bad neighbor.
(English Proverb)
A lie can be halfway around the world before the truth gets its boots on.
(English Proverb)
A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds.
(English Proverb)
A poor man's debt makes a great noise.
(English Proverb)
A surgeon experiments on the heads of orphans.
(English Proverb)
After a typhoon there are pears to gather up.
(English Proverb)
Almsgiving never impoverished, stealing never enriched, and prosperity never made wise.
(English Proverb)
An old wrinkle never wears out.
(English Proverb)
Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies.
(English Proverb)
Better a finger off than one wagging.
(English Proverb)
Better to say nothing, than to say something not to the purpose.
(English Proverb)
Business first, pleasure after.
(English Proverb)
Clogs to clogs in three generations.
(English Proverb)
Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
(English Proverb)
Don't cross the bridge till you get to it.
(English Proverb)
Eat leeks in march, garlic in may, all the rest of the year the doctors may play.
(English Proverb)
A creaking cart goes long on the wheels.
(English Proverb)
A good lawyer, an evil neighbour.
(English Proverb)
A lie has no legs, but a scandal has wings.
(English Proverb)
A man that breaks his word, bids others be false to him.
(English Proverb)
A poor man's table is soon spread.
(English Proverb)
A thief believes everybody steals.
(English Proverb)
After-wit is dear bought.
(English Proverb)
Although shrimps may dance around, they do not leave the river.
(English Proverb)
An open door may tempt a saint.
(English Proverb)
At the end of the game the king and the pawn go into the same bag.
(English Proverb)
Better a little chiding than a good deal of heartache.
(English Proverb)
Better untaught than ill taught.
(English Proverb)
Business is business.
(English Proverb)
Close only counts in horseshoes and hand-grenades.
(English Proverb)
Debts remain from day to day.
(English Proverb)
Don't cross your bridges before you come to them.
(English Proverb)
Eat not cherries with the great.
(English Proverb)
A dimple in the chin, your living comes in; a dimple in the cheek, your living to seek.
(English Proverb)
A good man in an evil society seems the greatest villain of all.
(English Proverb)
A light burden's heavy if far borne.
(English Proverb)
A man that will fight will find a cudgel in every hedge.
(English Proverb)
A poor workman blames his tools.
(English Proverb)
A trapped cat becomes a lion.
(English Proverb)
All cats love fish but hate to get their paws wet.
(English Proverb)
Always sample a maidens charms before the wedding.
(English Proverb)
An oven and mill are nurseries of news.
(English Proverb)
Authority shows the man.
(English Proverb)
Better bad than without.
(English Proverb)
Better wit than wealth.
(English Proverb)
But an unwatched kettle over boils.
(English Proverb)
Cobbler, stick to thy last.
(English Proverb)
Deeds are fruits, words are leaves.
(English Proverb)
Don't eat the calf in the cow's belly.
(English Proverb)
Eat to live, don't live to eat.
(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)
A good paymaster never wants workmen.
(English Proverb)
A little Learning is a dangerous thing.
(English Proverb)
A man without reason is a beast in season
(English Proverb)
A pound of care will not pay an ounce of debt.
(English Proverb)
A vain belief, unprofitable.
(English Proverb)
All flowers are not in one garland.
(English Proverb)
Ambition makes people diligent.
(English Proverb)
Anger and haste hinder good counsel.
(English Proverb)
Bashfulness is an enemy to poverty.
(English Proverb)
Better face a danger once than be always in fear.
(English Proverb)
Beware of Beware of "Had I known".
(English Proverb)
Buying and selling is but winning and losing.
(English Proverb)
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