1000

Welly

1. Waste not,want not.

Էѡ

2. From saving comes having.

Խڼ

3. A penny saved is a penny gained.

ʡһһġ

4. Take care of the pence and the pound

will take care of themselves.

Ǯٱɶࡣ

5. Frugality is an estate alone.

ڼһڲƲ

6. He that regards not a penny,will lavish a pound.

СǮ֪ʡǮĻ

7. Small gains bring great wealth.

Сɾ޸

8. Many a little makes a mickle.

ٱɶࡣ

9. As the touchstone tries gold,so gold tries man.

Խ֮ʯԽƽˡ

10.Courage and resolution are the spirit

and soul of virtue.

¸Һͼµꡣ

11.The path to glory is always rugged.

֮·

12.Nothing is difficult to the man who will try.

£ֻҪ˿ԡ

13.The fire is the test of gold;adversity of strong man.

һ׳ʿ

14.Great hopes make great man.

Զϣΰ

15.No way is impossible to courage.

ʿǰ·

16.A smooth sea never made a skillful mariner.

ƽĴ󺣾ͳˮ֡

17.The good seaman is known in bad weather.

²ʶóõĺԱҪʶúԱƾ



18.The best hearts are always the bravest.

Ϊ¸ҵĵ

19.We must not lie down,and cry,God help us.

󼺡

20.He that falls today may be up again tomorrow.

Ҳͻվ

21.Rome was not built in a day.

һտɽɣֱسɡ

22.Success belongs to the persevering.

ʤڼ̲εˡ

23.We must repeat a thousand and one times that

perseverance is the only road to success.

Ҫ꣺ȡʤΨһ

·

24.Perseverance is failing nineteen times

and succeeding the twentieth.

ʮŴʧܣڶʮλóɹͽм֡

25.Step by step the ladder is ascended.

Ҫ𼶵ǡ

26.Adversity leads to prosperity.

ͨʢ

27.Patience and application will carry us through.

ͺרĻʹǶȹѹء

28.Fortune often rewards with interest those

that have patience to wait for her.

ֻҪģͷܻкˣĺˣ

˳

29.All things will come round to him who will but wait.

ֻҪϵȴһжᰴʱ

30.Constant dropping wears the stone.

ˮɴʯ

31.Omelets are not made without breaking of eggs.

ƣɣԸԿ࣬ԤЧ

ﲻ

32.The world is a ladder for some to go up

and others to go down.

һݣȥ¡

33.There needs a long apprenticeship to understand

the mystery of the world's trade.

Ҫ֪°ض࣬Ҫѧͽ

34.Life is sweet.

ǿɰģ޲()

35.Where there is life,there is hope.

Ϣϣڡ

36.Life is not all beer and skittles.

ȫǳԺ֡

37.Much water runs by the mill that

the miller knows not of.

ǰ£Щǲ֪

38.Fortune knocks once at least at every man's door.

˶˵һ졣

39.If you are too fortunate,you will not know yourself;

if you are too unfortunate,nobody will know you.

̫ã˲ǣ̫ᡣ

40.Every man is the architect of his own fortune.

ÿһ˶ҸĽʦ

41.Happy is he who knows his follies in his youth.

ǵʱµҸġ

42.Misfortunes never (seldom) come alone (single).

С

43.Misfortune is a good teacher.

õĽʦ

44.Misfortunes come at night.

ڲ⡣

45.Misfortunes tell us what fortune is.

ͷ󣬲֪˹

46.Adversity makes a man wise,not rich.

ʹ˴ʹ˸С

47.Live and learn.

ϣѧϡ

48.It is never too old to learn.

Ϊѧߡ

49.A man becomes learned by asking questions.

Ҫѧʣ͵öʣҵ

50.There is no royal road to learning.

ѧ̹;

51.He who is ashamed of asking is ashamed of learning.

η֮˳ѧ

52.What is learned in the cradle lasts till the grave.

ӤʱѧĶǡ

53.Learning makes a good man better and ill man worse.

֪ʶʹ˸ã˸

54.Soon learnt,soon forgotten.

ѧÿ죬ÿ졣

55.Learn young,learn fair.

Ϊѧ࣬ѧѧá

56.A lazy youth,a lousy age.

ʱࡣ

57.He that knows nothing,doubts nothing.

֪ɡ

58.A good name keeps its luster in the dark.

õںڰҲ⡣

59.Fame is a magnifying glass.

ǷŴ󾵡

60.A good fame is better than a good face.

ʤò

61.Fame like a river is narrowest at its

source and broadest afar off.

ԴԶ㡣

62.Take honour from me and my life is done.

ûû

63.Beware of him who regards not his reputation.

Ҫˡ

64.It is better to die with honour than to live in infamy.

ٵʤ

65.Adversity successfully overcome is the highest glory.

ɹؿ˷Ĺ١

66.Reputation is often got without merit

and lost without fault.

޹ǳ£޹ʧҲǳ¡

67.Your father's honour is to you

but a second-hand honour.

˵׵ֻǼӵ

68.Never trust another what you should do yourself.

Լ£Ҫίи

69.It is an equal failing to trust everybody,

and to trust nobody.

һ벻κˣͬ㡣

70.Eat a peck of salt with a man before you trust him.

һ֮ǰҪ˽

71.If you trust before you try,

you may repent before you die.

ĿĻڡ

72.Never trust to fine words.

Ư

73.Trust not a great weight to a slender thread.

ϸ߹վɿ

74.Be just to all,but trust not all.

Ҫһ˶Ҫһ˶Ρ

75.Trust thyself only,and another shall not betray thee.

ֻҪԼ˲Ų㡣

76.Self-trust is the essence of heroism.

ΪӢƷ֮

77.Confidence is a plant of slow growth.

һֲ

78.Truth is the daughter of time.

ʱŮ

79.Truth hath a good face,but ill clothes.

Ŀڡ

80.Truth and roses have thorns about them.

õ壬Զд̡

81.Truth may be blamed,but shall never be shamed.

ܻᱻѣ衣

82.Though malice may darken truth,it cannot put it out.

޷

83.Truth will prevail.

ʤ

84.Truth's best ornament is nakedness.

װΡ

85.Facts are stubborn things.

ʵǿĶ

86.Sooner or later,the truth comes to light.

ס

87.The truths we least like to hear are those

which it is most to our advantage to know.

Ըʵ֪˻

кôʵ

88.Falsehood like a nettle stings those

who meddle with it.

ݡ飬Ū֡

89.There is many a fair thing full false.

˵úĶ

90.Though a lie be well drest,it is ever overcome.

װ䲻ͷܻᱻ¶

91.A lie begets a lie till they come to generations.

ԣ

92.A false tongue will hardly speak truth.

಻ԡ

93.False with one can be false with two.

һ٣Ҳ١

94.He that will lie will steal.

˵ѵҲͻ͵ԡ

95.Gossiping and lying go together.

ԳͻѻС

96.Equivocation is first cousin to a lie.

ǻѻĽס

97.A great talker is a great liar.

̸Ҳ˵ѡ

98.The greatest liars talk most of themselves.

Դ޵˵ߡ

99.Lying rides upon debt's back.

ծ˻ѻࡣ

100. Lying is the first step to the gallows.

˵϶ͷ̨ĵһ
