More Yiddish Proverbs
- Let it be worse, so long as it’s a change.
- With money in your pocket, you are wise, handsome and you sing well too.
- The heart of a man may be compared to a sausage; no one can tell exactly what’s inside.
- By day they’re ready to divorce, by night they’re ready for bed.
- Beware of still water, a still dog, and a still enemy.
- Who wins first, loses last.
- Better to hear curses than to be pitied.
- To be rich is not everything, but it certainly helps.
- You buy yourself an enemy when you lend a man money.
- The heaviest burden is an empty pocket.
- Everyone is kneaded out of the same dough but not baked in the same oven.
- Hope for miracles, but don’t rely on one.
- The soldiers fight, and the kings are heroes.
- When a thief kisses you, count your teeth.
- Weeping makes the heart grow lighter.
- Not all nice things are dear, but those that are dear are nice.
- Make new friends, but don’t forget the old ones.
- Better the best of the worst than the worst of the best.
- The best horse needs a whip, intelligent men need advice, and devout women need a man.
- You can make the dream bigger than the night.
- Once it was the parents who taught their children to talk; now the children teach their parents to keep quiet.
- Nothing tastes bitterer than the truth.
- You can throw a cat whoever you want; it always falls on its feet.
- You can’t put thank you in your pocket.
- Better a thief for a neighbor than an overzealous rabbi.
- Better an ounce of luck than a pound of gold.
- Words should be weighed, not counted.