More Icelandic Proverbs
- Hate not the man, but the weakness.
- Pissing in your shoes won’t keep your feet warm for long.
- The twigs are rarely better than the trunk.
- Men do not limp while their legs are the same length.
- Better be alone than in bad company.
- The gift expects another gift in return.
- The revenge that is postponed is not forgotten.
- An offer of friendship to a friend’s foe is unbecoming an honorable man.
- If you get lost in an Icelandic forest, simply stand up and you will find your way.
- Our good life sure is there for us, unless we learned some bad conduct in our home as children.
- She who dances with the chimney sweeper will eventually end up black.
- It is better to suffer in the name of truth than being rewarded for lying.
- It is better to be a master in a cottage than servant in a castle.
- Children generally follow the example of their parents, but imitate their faults more surely than their virtues.
- You do not really know your friends from your enemies until the ice breaks.
- The sun that melts the wox is the same that hardens the mud.
- People come where people are.
- Strike while the iron is hot.
- The sun that melts the wox is the same that hardens the mud.
- A good beginning makes a good ending.
- There are men so poor that the only thing they have is money.
- There are seven different kind of weather in one autumn night.
- If you wish to know what a man is, make him king.
- Cultures are born and die, but the cheese is immortal.
- Children will thrive best on varied diet.
- If wishes were horses, beggars would ride.
- Be straightforward in all your dealing and noble with strangers.