Quotes
Poems
Proverbs
Stories
Traditional
English
Latin
German
French
Spanish
African
Italian
Chinese
Man
No Result
View All Result
Stories
Traditional
English
Latin
German
French
Spanish
African
Italian
Chinese
Man
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home
Proverbs
Spanish Proverbs
Spanish Proverbs
(1985 Proverbs)
Keeping a woman to her word is like trying to hold an eel by its tail.
(Spanish Proverb)
It is not the load but the overload that kills.
(Spanish Proverb)
It is better to leap over the ditch than trust to the pleadings of good men.
(Spanish Proverb)
In the bagpiper's house they are all dancers.
(Spanish Proverb)
If you would make a thief honest, trust him.
(Spanish Proverb)
If you want to know secrets, seek for them in trouble or in pleasure.
(Spanish Proverb)
If thy heart fail thee, why then climb at all?
(Spanish Proverb)
If the devil is going to disguise himself, it will be as a monk or a lawyer.
(Spanish Proverb)
I say it to you, daughter; hear it, daughter-in-law.
(Spanish Proverb)
I am like you and you like me. the devil united us.
(Spanish Proverb)
He will never worship well the image on the altar who knew it when it was a trunk of wood in the garden.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who takes the wrong road must make his journey twice over.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who peeps through a hole will discover his dole.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who leaves his people will be left by God.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who has no wife, is for thrashing her daily; but he that has one, takes care of her.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who has a handsome wife, a castle on the frontier, or a vineyard on the roadside, is never without war.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who dresses ion others' clothes will be undressed on the highway.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who avoids the temptation avoids the sin.
(Spanish Proverb)
He that is not gallant at twenty, strong at thirty, rich at forty, or experienced at fifty, will never be gallant, strong, rich, or prudent.
(Spanish Proverb)
He is blind enough who cannot see through a sieve.
(Spanish Proverb)
Grain by grain the hen fills her crop.
(Spanish Proverb)
God gives wings to the ant that she may perish the sooner.
(Spanish Proverb)
Give a traitor good words and you make him loyal.
(Spanish Proverb)
For the want of worthy men they made my father alcade.
(Spanish Proverb)
Fall sick, and you will see who is your friend and who not.
(Spanish Proverb)
Every law is broken to become a king.
(Spanish Proverb)
Don't call me a little olive until you've picked me.
(Spanish Proverb)
Do not steal a loaf from him that kneads and bakes.
(Spanish Proverb)
Command your wealth, else that will command you.
(Spanish Proverb)
Beware of a reconciled friend as of the devil.
(Spanish Proverb)
Better go about than fall into the ditch.
(Spanish Proverb)
At an ambuscade of villains a man does better with his feet than his hands.
(Spanish Proverb)
An ass with her colt goes not straight to the mill.
(Spanish Proverb)
A word from the mouth is like a stone from a sling.
(Spanish Proverb)
A sick man sleeps, but not a debtor.
(Spanish Proverb)
Make way for a madman and a bull.
(Spanish Proverb)
Like a parakeet that says what he knows but doesn't know what he says.
(Spanish Proverb)
Let no shovel-beaked bird ever enter your yard.
(Spanish Proverb)
Jest so that it may not turn to earnest.
(Spanish Proverb)
It is not the hook or the rod, but the bait that lures.
(Spanish Proverb)
It is better to have bread left over than to run short of wine.
(Spanish Proverb)
In the absence of honest men, they made my father mayor.
(Spanish Proverb)
If you would live in health, grow old early.
(Spanish Proverb)
If you want to beat a dog, say he eat your iron.
(Spanish Proverb)
If three people say you are an ass, put on a bridle.
(Spanish Proverb)
If the child cries let the mother hush it, and if it will not be hushed let it cry.
(Spanish Proverb)
I perfectly feel even at my fingers end.
(Spanish Proverb)
I a lazy lout, you a lazy lout, marry me, Antonia.
(Spanish Proverb)
He whose house is tiled with glass should not throw stones at his neighbour's.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who stumbles twice over one stone deserves to break his shins.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who peeps through a hole may see what will vex him.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who laid a snare for me has fallen into it.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who has no voice in the valley, will have none in the council.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who has a good wife can bear any evil.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who does what he likes, does not what he ought.
(Spanish Proverb)
He who at twenty understands nothing, at thirty knows nothing, and at forty has nothing, will lead a wretched old age.
(Spanish Proverb)
He that is more civil than usual, either wants to cozen you or has need of you.
(Spanish Proverb)
He is always right who suspects that he is always wrong.
(Spanish Proverb)
Good, that comes too late, is good as nothing.
(Spanish Proverb)
God gives almonds to one who has no teeth.
(Spanish Proverb)
Give a clown your foot, and he'll take your hand.
(Spanish Proverb)
For better for worse they have married me.
(Spanish Proverb)
Experience is not always the kindest of teachers, but it is surely the best.
(Spanish Proverb)
Every cock is proud on his own dung hill.
(Spanish Proverb)
Don't refuse a wing to the one who gave you the chicken.
(Spanish Proverb)
Do not rejoice at my grief, for when mine is old yours will be new.
(Spanish Proverb)
Comes in at the end with a wet sail.
(Spanish Proverb)
Beware of a bad woman, and put no trust in a good one.
(Spanish Proverb)
Better be the head of a rat than the tail of a lion.
(Spanish Proverb)
Ask for too much in order to get enough.
(Spanish Proverb)
An ass let him be who brays at an ass.
(Spanish Proverb)
A word and a stone once launched cannot be recalled.
(Spanish Proverb)
A shoemaker's wife and a smith's mare are always the worst shod.
(Spanish Proverb)
Make a bridge of silver for the flying enemy.
(Spanish Proverb)
Like a collier's sack, bad without and worse within.
(Spanish Proverb)
Let no one take a pawn that eats.
(Spanish Proverb)
I've fried my sausage in better pans than these.
(Spanish Proverb)
It is not the fine, but the coarse and ill-spun that breaks.
(Spanish Proverb)
It is better to be a mouse in a cat's mouth than a man in a lawyer's hands.
(Spanish Proverb)
In my own house I am a king.
(Spanish Proverb)
More Spanish Proverbs (Based on Topics)
View All Spanish Proverbs
Buy books and product about Spanish @ Amazon
Page 8 of 25
Prev
1
…
7
8
9
…
25
Next
Popular Topics
Love Proverbs
-
Life Proverbs
-
Death & Dying Proverbs
-
Success Proverbs
-
Happiness Proverbs
-
Friendship Proverbs
-
View All Topics
Popular Origins
English
-
Chinese
-
Latin
-
French
-
German
-
Spanish
-
Portuguese
-
Japanese
-
Indian
-
View All Countries / Origins
Other Inspiring Sections
Inspirational Stories
-
Poems
-
Quotes
No Result
View All Result
Stories
Traditional
English
Latin
German
French
Spanish
African
Italian
Chinese
Man
© 2020
Inspirational Stories