French
-
All’s well that ends well.
-
You pay for your mistakes.
-
Beggars can’t be choosers.
-
Whoever laughs last laughs best.
-
He who steals an egg will steal an ox.
-
When one doesn’t have the things that one loves, one must love what one has.
-
Better late than never.
-
Impossible isn’t French.
-
Time is money.
-
One does not change a winning team.” In other words, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
-
Big fish eat little fish.
-
You can’t make an omelet without breaking eggs.
-
Nothing should be left to chance.
-
Don’t judge a book by its cover.
-
Everyone sees noon at his own door, or Everyone sees things their own way.
-
A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
-
Birds of a feather flock together.
-
To each his own.
-
Don’t jump to conclusions.
-
All that glitters isn’t gold.
-
Tit for tat.
-
To kill two birds with one stone.
-
Once the first step is taken, there’s no going back.
-
Other times, other customs.
-
There’s no substitute for experience.
-
Little by little, the bird makes its nest.
-
The future will tell.
-
No one is as deaf as the one who does not want to listen.
-
One always goes back to one’s roots.
-
Slow and steady wins the race.
-
Once bitten, twice shy.
-
There’s no smoke without fire.
-
Better safe than sorry.
-
Silence implies consent.
-
Walls have ears.
-
All things come to those who wait.
-
Give some and keep the rest.
-
Small streams form great rivers.
-
It is better to prevent than to heal.
-
Like father like son.
-
Every cloud has a silver lining.
-
Don’t try to do two things at once.
-
He who takes it slow and steady travels a long way.
-
Commonly applied french proverbs flair beauty impress.
-
Paris was not made in a day!
-
Don’t wake the sleeping cat.
-
Who does not move forward, recedes.
-
He who has land has quarrels.
-
To strike while the iron is hot.