English proverbs (S)
Proverbs are popularly defined as short expressions of popular wisdom. Efforts to improve on the popular definition have not led to a more precise definition. The wisdom is in the form of a general observation about the world or a bit of advice, sometimes more nearly an attitude toward a situation.
S
- Same meat, different gravy.
- Same shit, with different flies on it.
- Same trouble, different day.
- Say something nice or say nothing at all.
- Seek and ye shall find.
- Christian New Testament
- Seek water in the sea.
- Self trust is the first secret of success.
- Sell a man a fish, he eats for a day, teach a man how to fish, you ruin a wonderful business opportunity.
- Karl Marx
- Set a thief to catch a thief.
- Shallow graves for shallow people.
- Ships happen. -Navy saying.
- Shit or get off the pot
- silence is golden
- Meaning: sometimes it is better not to say anything.
- Simple minds think alike. (William Truong)
- Simple things please/amuse simple minds.
- Alternative: Simple minds, simple pleasures.
- Six of one, and half a dozen the other.
- Meaning: Describes two actions with the same result, or two things that are essentially the same.
- Slow and steady wins the race.
- Variant: Slow but sure.
- Smile, and the world smiles with you; cry, and you cry alone.
- So close, yet so far.
- Some days you get the bear, other days the bear gets you.
- Someone who gossips to you will gossip about you.
- Something is better than nothing.
- Something worth doing is worth doing well.
- A son is a son 'till he gets him a wife; a daughter's a daughter all her life.
- Interpretation: the relationship between a daughter and her parents is enduring; the relationship with a son is attenuated after he marries.
- Spare the rod, spoil the child.
- Meaning: Lack of deserved discipline develops undesired behavior in a child.
- Speak the truth, but leave immediately
- The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak.
- Gospel of Matthew 26:41
- The squeaky wheel gets the grease.
- or The squeaky wheel gets replaced.
- If you speak up, you will go farther in life.
- Those who complain, will attract more attention (for good or ill) than those who are content.
- The start of a journey should never be mistaken for success.
- S tart small; T hink tall; R each over the wall; I nvest your all; V isualize the mall; E xpect you may fall; but, if you fall, that's not all; get up and STRIVE again.
- Dr. Robert Schuller
- Sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me.
- Contrast: "A blow with a word strikes deeper than a blow with a sword."
- A still tongue makes a wise head.
- From Lewis the (Black) Barber; Lake Charles, LA; who always told people, "Never let the right hand know what the left hand is doing; a still tongue makes a wise head; still water runs deep."
- Still waters run deep.
- Possible interpretation: Looks can be deceiving, quiet people are often the most deep.
- A stitch in time saves nine.
- Fix the small problem now before it becomes larger and harder to fix.
- Stolen fruit is the sweetest.
- Possible interpretation: forbidden things are the most tempting
- Straightn not the dog's tail even in the bamboo hollow.
- The straw that broke the camel's back.
- The last of a number of little things which led to something major.
- Strike while the iron is hot.
- Possible interpretation: Seize the moment. Take the opportunity now; don't waste it.
- Success grows out of struggles to overcome difficulties.
- Success is a journey not a destination.
- Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.
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