More Jewish Proverbs
- First improve yourself, and then judge others.
- What the daughter does, the mother did.
- Charity is the spice of riches.
- Beware of the person who gives you advice according to his own interests.
- People are like grass in the field: some blossom, some wither.
- I ask not for a lighter burden, but for broader shoulders.
- You can’t force anyone to love you or to lend you money.
- Better an honest smack in the face than a false kiss.
- What one has, one doesn’t want, and what one wants, one doesn’t have.
- When two divorced people marry, four people get into bed.
- As you do, so will be done to you.
- Do not meet troubles half-way.
- Do not be wise in words – be wise in deeds.
- Even the most expensive clock still shows sixty minutes in every hour.
- A cheerful heart is good medicine, but a crushed spirit dries up the bones.
- The poor fool is a man who falls on his back and breaks his nose.
- Taxes grow without rain.
- Whoever enjoys his life is doing the Creator’s will.
- He who has no hand cannot clench his fist.
- If you can’t go over, you must go under.
- The innkeeper loves a drunkard, but not for a son-in-law.
- What soap is for the body, tears are for the soul.
- When you have no choice, mobilize the spirit of courage.
- First learn, and then form opinions.
- A person worries about the past, distresses about the present, and fears the future.
- Teach your tongue to say “I don’t know” instead of to make up something.
- Where two Jews, three opinions.