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Proverbs
Italian Proverbs
Italian Proverbs
(1849 Proverbs)
Better slip with the foot than with the tongue.
(Italian Proverb)
At the end of the game, you'll see who's the winner.
(Italian Proverb)
As is the lover so is the beloved.
(Italian Proverb)
All ships leak: some amidships, some in the bows, some in the hold.
(Italian Proverb)
A thing is never much talked of but there is some truth in it.
(Italian Proverb)
He who takes a woman gives away his freedom.
(Italian Proverb)
He who knows little knows enough if he knows how to hold is tongue.
(Italian Proverb)
He who has teeth has no bread, and he who has bread has no teeth.
(Italian Proverb)
He who gives fair words feeds you with an empty spoon.
(Italian Proverb)
He who buys by the pennyworth keeps his own house and other men's too.
(Italian Proverb)
He that seeks, finds, and sometimes what he would rather not.
(Italian Proverb)
He that has swallowed the devil may swallow his horns.
(Italian Proverb)
He is the world's master who despises it, its slave who prizes it.
(Italian Proverb)
He is in no place who is everywhere.
(Italian Proverb)
He cannot lead a good life who serves without wages.
(Italian Proverb)
Good repute is like the cypress: once cut, it never puts forth leaf again.
(Italian Proverb)
Give your friend a pig and your enemy a peach.
(Italian Proverb)
Fortune comes to him who strives for it.
(Italian Proverb)
Every one to his own calling, and the ox to the plough.
(Italian Proverb)
Even counted sheep are eaten by the wolf.
(Italian Proverb)
Don't even take a bath with fools, because they'll throw away the soap.
(Italian Proverb)
Choose neither a lover nor linen by candlelight.
(Italian Proverb)
Better one true friend than a hundred relatives.
(Italian Proverb)
Be the same thing that ye wa'd be ca'd.
(Italian Proverb)
As demure as an old whore at a christening.
(Italian Proverb)
All is not butter that comes from the cow.
(Italian Proverb)
A thing done has a head. [The exultation of an ancient sculptor on his satisfactorily completing the head of his statue.]
(Italian Proverb)
He would not give the devil a knife to cut his throat.
(Italian Proverb)
He who sweats more in peace, bleeds less in war.
(Italian Proverb)
He who knows but little quickly tells it.
(Italian Proverb)
He who has scalded himself once blows the next time.
(Italian Proverb)
He who gives bread to others' dogs is often barked at by his own.
(Italian Proverb)
He who builds on another's ground loses his stone and mortar.
(Italian Proverb)
He that seeks to have many friends never has any.
(Italian Proverb)
He that has but one pig easily fattens it.
(Italian Proverb)
He is well constituted who grieves not for what he has not, and rejoices for what he has.
(Italian Proverb)
He is a very sorry barber who has but one comb.
(Italian Proverb)
He begins to grow bad who believes himself good.
(Italian Proverb)
Good company on the road is the shortest of short cuts.
(Italian Proverb)
Give the wise man a hint and leave him to act.
(Italian Proverb)
For the buyer a hundred eyes are too few, for the seller one is enough.
(Italian Proverb)
Every one thinks himself without sin because he has not those of others.
(Italian Proverb)
Even an ass will not fall twice in the same quicksand.
(Italian Proverb)
Don't cry fried fish before they are caught.
(Italian Proverb)
Call not a surgeon before you are wounded.
(Italian Proverb)
Better have one bee than a host of flies.
(Italian Proverb)
Be the horse good or bad always wear your spurs.
(Italian Proverb)
As both a good horse and a bad horse heed the spur, so both a good woman and a bad woman need the stick.
(Italian Proverb)
All are not saints who go to church.
(Italian Proverb)
A stick is soon found to beat a dog.
(Italian Proverb)
He would drown in a spoonful of water.
(Italian Proverb)
He who sups with the devil must have a long spoon.
(Italian Proverb)
He who is without debt is without credit.
(Italian Proverb)
He who has no patience, has nothing at all.
(Italian Proverb)
He who fails to plan, plans to fail.
(Italian Proverb)
He who builds by the roadside has many surveyors.
(Italian Proverb)
He that runs fast will not run long.
(Italian Proverb)
He that has a head of glass must not throw stones at another.
(Italian Proverb)
He is very blind who cannot see the sun.
(Italian Proverb)
He is a sorry barber who has but one comb.
(Italian Proverb)
Have not all your eggs in one nest.
(Italian Proverb)
God sends us the meat, but it is the Devil who sends us cooks.
(Italian Proverb)
Give the priest drink, for the clerk is thirsty.
(Italian Proverb)
For an honest man half his wits are enough; the whole is too little for a knave.
(Italian Proverb)
Every one thinks he has more than his share of brains.
(Italian Proverb)
Even among the apostles there was a Judas.
(Italian Proverb)
Don't cross the water unless you see the bottom.
(Italian Proverb)
Call me not olive before you see me gathered.
(Italian Proverb)
Better have an egg to-day than a hen to-morrow.
(Italian Proverb)
Be sure before you marry of a house wherein to tarry.
(Italian Proverb)
Anyone who is satisfied to stand still should not complain when others pass him.
(Italian Proverb)
Agree between yourselves (as to the time), quoth Arlotto, and I will make it rain.
(Italian Proverb)
A starved town is soon forced to surrender.
(Italian Proverb)
He would break his neck against a straw.
(Italian Proverb)
He who sleeps well does not feel the fleas.
(Italian Proverb)
He who is the offender is never the forgiver.
(Italian Proverb)
He who has money to throw away, let him employ workmen, and not stand by.
(Italian Proverb)
He who esteems none but himself is as happy as a king.
(Italian Proverb)
He who builds a house in the market-place, builds either too high or too low.
(Italian Proverb)
He that refuseth praise the first time does it because he would have it the second.
(Italian Proverb)
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