More Japanese Proverbs
- The stake that sticks up gets hammered down.
- The day you decide to do it is your lucky day.
- You reap what you sow.
- The smallest, good deed is better than the grandest good intention.
- Not knowing is Buddha.
- We learn little from victory, much from defeat.
- One who smiles rather than rages is always the stronger.
- If money is not thy servant, it will be thy master.
- Not seeing is a flower.
- One kind word can warm three winter months.
- Don’t offer things to people who are incapable of appreciating them.
- Life without endeavours is like entering a jewel-mine and coming out with empty hands.
- Of flowers, the cherry blossom; of men, the warrior.
- Even when months and days are long, life is short.
- If you understand everything you must be misinformed.
- Tigers die and leave their skins; people die and leave their names.
- Vision without action is a daydream. Action without vision is a nightmare.
- Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow.
- Gold coins to a cat.
- A man in love mistakes a pimple for a dimple.
- Fall down seven times, get up eight times.
- Take a bad or desperate situation and turn it into a successful one.
- Even monkeys fall from trees.
- Forgiving the unrepentant is like drawing pictures on water.
- Be not afraid of going slowly. Be afraid of standing still.
- Everyone has their own tastes. Respect others.
- Dumplings rather than flowers.