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Proverbs
Latin Proverbs
Latin Proverbs
(2261 Proverbs)
Avoid gambling.
(Latin Proverb)
Extreme law, extreme injustice.
(Latin Proverb)
He who restrains his anger overcomes his greatest enemy.
(Latin Proverb)
In the very act of committing an offence.
(Latin Proverb)
Natura genetrix.
(Latin Proverb)
Sweet is war to those who have never experienced it.
(Latin Proverb)
To whiten ivory with dye is to spoil nature by art.
(Latin Proverb)
You hold an eel by the tail.
(Latin Proverb)
Be what you appear to be.
(Latin Proverb)
Figs he calls figs, a spade a spade.
(Latin Proverb)
He writes with an iron pen.
(Latin Proverb)
It flies gently, but wounds deeply.
(Latin Proverb)
Negation proves nothing.
(Latin Proverb)
Tears are at times as eloquent as words.
(Latin Proverb)
To work is to pray.
(Latin Proverb)
You sail in the same boat.
(Latin Proverb)
A delightful hallucination.
(Latin Proverb)
Being but a woman, raise not the sword.
(Latin Proverb)
Have a care how you irritate the wasps.
(Latin Proverb)
Hearing he hears not. He is deaf to entreaty.
(Latin Proverb)
It is better to be always prepared than to suffer once.
(Latin Proverb)
No folly like being in love.
(Latin Proverb)
Test the danger by the Carians.
(Latin Proverb)
Truth will be out.
(Latin Proverb)
A fire is nourished by its own ashes.
(Latin Proverb)
Believe no man more than yourself when you are spoken of.
(Latin Proverb)
He conquers who conquers himself.
(Latin Proverb)
Him whom Jove would destroy he first deprives of his reason.
(Latin Proverb)
It is easy to set a cask a rolling.
(Latin Proverb)
No gain satisfies a greedy mind.
(Latin Proverb)
The antidote before the poison.
(Latin Proverb)
Urge the horse close to the turning-post.
(Latin Proverb)
A fool repays a salve by a stab, and a stab by a salve.
(Latin Proverb)
Believe that you have it, and you will have it.
(Latin Proverb)
He does not sing his father's songs.
(Latin Proverb)
Hitherto I gave you credit for having horns.
(Latin Proverb)
It is well to buy oil as well as salt.
(Latin Proverb)
No peacock envies another peacock his tail.
(Latin Proverb)
The bust of Mercury cannot be carved in every wood.
(Latin Proverb)
We all envy other people's luck.
(Latin Proverb)
A mouse in pitch.
(Latin Proverb)
Bright enough in the dark, dull in time of day.
(Latin Proverb)
He fights with spirit as well as with the sword.
(Latin Proverb)
I am in a fix.
(Latin Proverb)
Let the buyer be on his guard.
(Latin Proverb)
Nothing reaches the intellect before making its appearance in the senses.
(Latin Proverb)
The cobbler should not go beyond his last.
(Latin Proverb)
We are content to forgo joy when pain is also lost.
(Latin Proverb)
A physician is an angel when employed, but a devil when one must pay him.
(Latin Proverb)
By hook or crook.
(Latin Proverb)
He has not even a clod of earth left to cover his remains.
(Latin Proverb)
I have other fish to fry.
(Latin Proverb)
Like a fish out of water.
(Latin Proverb)
Often there is eloquence in a silent look.
(Latin Proverb)
The course of a river is not to be altered.
(Latin Proverb)
What is lighter than a feather? Dust. What lighter than dust? Wind. What lighter than the wind? A harlot. What lighter than a harlot? Nothing.
(Latin Proverb)
A well which is drawn from is improved.
(Latin Proverb)
Carthage must be destroyed.
(Latin Proverb)
He is looking out for a fig.
(Latin Proverb)
I know Simon, and Simon knows me.
(Latin Proverb)
Love and a cough cannot be hid.
(Latin Proverb)
Old age is venerable.
(Latin Proverb)
The field should be poorer than the farmer.
(Latin Proverb)
What is not understood by what is less understood.
(Latin Proverb)
A wheel not greased will creak.
(Latin Proverb)
Danger can never by overcome without taking risks.
(Latin Proverb)
He moistens the lips, but leaves the palate dry.
(Latin Proverb)
I shall paint you in your own colours.
(Latin Proverb)
Lovers are madmen.
(Latin Proverb)
One loyal friend is worth ten thousand relatives.
(Latin Proverb)
The fish requires salt.
(Latin Proverb)
What is not understood.
(Latin Proverb)
A wolf's head.
(Latin Proverb)
Deliberation often loses a good chance.
(Latin Proverb)
He opens the theatre, and immediately closes it.
(Latin Proverb)
I speak of garlic, you reply about onions.
(Latin Proverb)
Make a virtue of necessity.
(Latin Proverb)
One man restored our fortunes by delay.
(Latin Proverb)
The force which a body at rest exercises on a body in motion impinging upon it.
(Latin Proverb)
What one knows it is sometimes useful to forget.
(Latin Proverb)
More Latin Proverbs (Based on Topics)
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Time
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Fool
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Education
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Wisdom & Knowledge
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Life
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Woman
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Death & Dying
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Dogs
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Vice & Virtue
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Wine
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Nature
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Sadness
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View All Latin Proverbs
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