2621 Proverbs about Thin / Page 32
621. 
Smoke, rain, and a scolding wife, are three bad things in a house.
622. 
Tell nothing to thy friend which why enemy may not know.
623. 
The earthen pan gains nothing by contact with the copper pot.
624. 
The fire is welcome within, when icicles hang without.
625. 
The owl thinks her children the fairest.
626. 
The poor man wants much, the miser everything.
627. 
The poor man's corm always grows thin.
628. 
The raven always thinks that her young ones are the whitest.
629. 
The scraping hen will get something; the crouching hen nothing.
630. 
There are three things from which no good can be got without a beating: a walnut-tree, a donkey, and a shrew.
631. 
There is help for everything, except death.
632. 
To know the law and do the right are two things.
633. 
Too little and too much spoils everything.
634. 
When every man gets his own the devil gets nothing.
635. 
Where there is no wit within no wit will come out.
636. 
Wolves are often hidden under sheep's clothing.
637. 
You can have too much of a good thing.
638. 
You may get something off a bone, but nothing off a stone.
639. 
A flying crow always catches something.
640. 
A fool may chance to say a wise thing.
2621 Proverbs, Page 32 of 132
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