More Irish Proverbs
- Who gossips with you will gossip of you.
- A misty winter brings a pleasant spring, a pleasant winter a misty spring.
- Where the tongue slips it speaks the truth.
- Men are like bagpipes – no sound comes from them until they are full.
- May the hinges of our friendship never grow rusty!
- The best things in life are the people we love, the places we have been and the memories we have made along the way.
- A man loves his sweetheart the most, his wife the best, but his mother the longest.
- A wren in the hand is better than a crane to be caught.
- Don’t become broke by trying to look rich.
- Every eye forms its own fancy.
- A questioning man is halfway to being wise.
- Better to be fortunate than rich.
- Need teaches a plan.
- Continual cheerfulness is a sign of wisdom.
- Humour, to a man, is like a feather pillow. It is filled with what is easy to get but gives great comfort.
- The fox never found a better messenger than himself.
- There is no luck except where there is discipline.
- A little fire that warms is better than a big fire that burns.
- There is only one thing worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about.
- Every patient is a doctor after his cure.
- You’ve got to do your own growing no matter how tall your father was.
- May neighbours respect you, trouble neglect you, the angels protect you, and Heaven accept you.
- Idleness is a fool’s desire.
- Never scald your lips with another man’s porridge.
- You’ll never plough a field by turning it over in your mind.
- A tune is more lasting than the song of the birds, and a word more lasting than the wealth of the world.
- Beware of the anger of a patient man.