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To come from little good to stark nought. - [Proverbial Phrases] To come up to the scratch. - [Proverbial Phrases] To commit the sheep to the care of the wolf. - (Spanish) [Proverbial Phrases] To condemn the error, but not to descend to personalities. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To confuse matters. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To count one's chickens before they are hatched. - [Proverbial Phrases] To cover the well after the child has been drowned in it. - (German) [Proverbial Phrases] To cram on every stitch of canvas. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To create a tempest in a teapot. - [Proverbial Phrases : Tempests] To cry famine on a heap of corn. - (French) [Proverbial Phrases] To cry out before one is hurt. - [Proverbial Phrases] To cry up wine, and sell vinegar. - (Spanish) [Proverbial Phrases] To cry with one eye and laugh with the other. - [Proverbial Phrases] To cure every one with the same ointment. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To cure evil by evil. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To cut a man with a sword of lead. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To cut broad thongs from another man's leather. - (French) [Proverbial Phrases] To cut his comb off. - [Proverbial Phrases] To cut his throat with a feather. - [Proverbial Phrases] To cut off one's nose to spite one's face. - (French) [Proverbial Phrases] To cut the coat according to the cloth. - [Proverbial Phrases] To cut the grass from under a person's feet. - [Proverbial Phrases] To cut the thread. [To open a letter; to break a seal.] - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To dance out of time. [To say an irrelevant thing: a thing out of place.] - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To deceive oneself is very easy. - [Proverbial Phrases] To deserve the whetstone. - [Proverbial Phrases] To die of laughing. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To dig one's grave with one's teeth. - (French) [Proverbial Phrases] To dig with golden spades. [To waste means.] - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To discover truth by telling a falsehood. - (Spanish) [Proverbial Phrases] To dispute about a donkey's shadow. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To dispute about smoke. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To draw blood from a stone. - [Proverbial Phrases] To draw the foot out of the mire. - (Spanish) [Proverbial Phrases] To draw the long bow. - [Proverbial Phrases] To draw the snake out of the hole with another's hand. - (Spanish) [Proverbial Phrases] To draw water in a sieve. [To waste time.] - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To drink from a colander. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To drink from the same cup. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To drink like frogs. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To err again on the same string. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To exact an offering from the dead. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To exchange a one-eyed horse for a blind one. - (French) [Proverbial Phrases] To fall from the wall into the ditch. - (Dutch) [Proverbial Phrases] To fare hard. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To fawn with the tail, and bite with the mouth. - (Spanish) [Proverbial Phrases] To fetch water after the house is burned. - (Spanish) [Proverbial Phrases] To fiddle while Rome is burning. - [Proverbial Phrases] To fight with every kind of weapon. - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] To fight with ghosts. [To speak against the dead.] - (Latin) [Proverbial Phrases] Displaying page 8 of 15 for this author: << Prev Next >> 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 [8] 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
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