More Yiddish Proverbs
- Who dances at the wedding, weeps at the funeral.
- Provide for the worst; the best can take care of itself.
- Someone who can hold on to his money is worth more than the one who earns it.
- To every answer you can find a new question.
- What can you do with a good cow that gives a lot of milk and then kicks the bucket over
- The longer the blind live, the more they see.
- Mothers-in-law are fine so long as they are deaf and blind.
- Too humble is half proud.
- You can wash your body but not your soul.
- Before you start up a ladder, count the rungs.
- From success to failure is one step; from failure to success is a long road.
- When one comes to comfort a young widow, he does not mean to perform a good deed.
- Experience is what we call the accumulation of our mistakes.
- What soap is to the body, laughter is to the soul.
- If you want to know what God thinks of money, look at the people he gives it to.
- You can’t measure the whole world with your own yardstick.
- When God wants to punish an idiot, He teaches them a few words of Hebrew.
- One old friend is better than two new ones.
- The cold strengthens you more than hunger.
- The doctor has a remedy for everything but poverty.
- Some people are electrifying; they light up a room when they leave.
- Better a steady dime than a rare dollar.
- Better an honest slap in the face than an insincere kiss.
- You are ushered in according to your dress; shown out according to your brains.
- Men would not be richer for being miserly; generosity does not make a man poorer.
- If it must always be better, it can never be good enough.
- You never lose a false coin.