| |
Beasts
There is no beast so savage but it sports with its mate. (Spanish). The ape claspeth her young so long that at last she killeth them. (English). | 1 |
| Asses sing badly because they pitch their voices too high. (German). | 2 |
| For every fruit consumed by a bat a hundred are spoiled. (Tamil). | 3 |
| If the bandicoot could see behind her she would break her heart and die. (Marathi). | 4 |
| If the bear will learn to dance he must go to school early. (German). | 5 |
| He feeds like a boar in a frank. (English). | 6 |
| It will rain seventy times before a buffalos horns will be wet. (Tamil). | 7 |
| It is easy to threaten a bull from the window. (Italian). | 8 |
| Are you to ask the bullock before you put on the pack saddle? (Telugu). | 9 |
| A gude calf is better than a calf o a gude kind. (Scotch). | 10 |
| If the camel gets his nose in the tent his body will soon follow. (Arabian). | 11 |
| He who plays with a cat must bear its scratches. (Arabian). | 12 |
| A colt is worth nothing if it does not break its halter. (French). | 13 |
| A cow is not called dapper unless she has a spot. (Danish). | 14 |
| More beautiful than the eye of a deer; more rapid than its speed. (Tamil). | 15 |
| Although a dog may go to sea the water must be lapped. (Tamil). | 16 |
| If a donkey bray at you dont bray at him. (English). | 17 |
| Only an elephant can carry an elephants load. (Marathi). | 18 |
| The ewe that doth bleat doth lose the most of her meat. (English). | 19 |
| The fox goes at last to the shop of the furrier. (Turkish). | 20 |
| The goat that climbs up the rocks must climb down again. (French GuyanaCreole). | 21 |
| In small woods may be caught large hares. (Dutch, Danish). | 22 |
| Hedgehogs are not to be killed with a fist. (Portuguese). | 23 |
| A hog thats bemired endeavours to bemire others. (English). | 24 |
| A golden bit does not make the horse any better. (Italian, German). | 25 |
| The greyhound that starts many hares kills none. (Spanish, Portuguese). | 26 |
| Incredible newsa jackal gone on a pilgrimage. (Marathi). | 27 |
| When the tree falls the kid can climb it. (Louisianian Creole). | 28 |
| Death devours lambs as well as sheep. (English). | 29 |
| The leopard is absent so they play with the cubs. (African). | 30 |
| The lion is not half so fierce as hes painted. (Spanish). | 31 |
| He that lacks my mare may buy my mare. (Scotch). | 32 |
| When mastiffs fight, little curs will bark. (English). | 33 |
| A mole can undermine the strongest rampart. (Chinese). | 34 |
| What need is there of a king in a country where there is no work, or of a mongoose where there are no snakes? (Tamil). | 35 |
| A monkey never watches his own tail; he watches his neighbours. (Mauritius Creole). | 36 |
| It is a bold mouse that makes her nest in the cats ear. (Danish). | 37 |
| Cutting off a mules ears wont make him a horse. (Louisianian Creole). | 38 |
| Art thou worn out and become a muskrat; hast thou cast thy horns? (Tamil). | 39 |
| The ox is never weary of carrying its horns. (Haytian Creole). | 40 |
| Pigs may whistle but they hae an ill mouth fort. (Scotch). | 41 |
| It is bad for puppies to play with cub bears. (Danish). | 42 |
| Rabbit says: Drink everything, eat everything, but dont tell everything. (Martinique Creole). | 43 |
| He is in search of a ram with five feet. (Italian). | 44 |
| Like excavating a mountain and catching a rat. (Tamil). | 45 |
| Let ilka sheep hang by its ain shanks. (Scotch). | 46 |
| The full sow knows not the squeak of the empty one. (Welsh). | 47 |
| A squirrel ascends by climbing. (Tamil). | 48 |
| The still swine eats the mesh; the wild ones run past it. (Danish). | 49 |
| He sits like a tiger withdrawing his claws. (Malay). | 50 |
| The breath o a fause friends waur, than the fuff (threat) o a weasel. (Scotch). | 51 |
| He who goes with wolves learns to howl. (Spanish, Italian, German, Danish). | 52 |
| |
Birds God gives every bird its food but they must fly for it. (Dutch). The fowl knows the serpents sneezing. (Bengalese). | 53 |
| Cherries are bitter to the glutted blackbird. (French). | 54 |
| Chickens are slow in coming from unlaid eggs. (German). | 55 |
| Though the cock crows not morning will come. (Afghan). | 56 |
| When the crane attempts to dance with the horse she gets broken bones. (Danish). | 57 |
| If you put a crow in a cage will it talk like a parrot? (Urdu). | 58 |
| He hasna the gumshion o the cuckoo. (Scotch). | 59 |
| He who makes himself a dove is eaten by hawks. (Italian). | 60 |
| Like a conversation of ducksnothing but wah-wah. (Turkish). | 61 |
| The old age of an eagle is as good as the youth of a sparrow. (Greek). | 62 |
| It is not every man that can carry a falcon on his hand. (Danish). | 63 |
| A wild goose never laid a tame egg. (English). | 64 |
| He that will meddle with all things must go shoo the goslings. (English). | 65 |
| Mother, marry me, marry me, or the gull will fly away with me. (Spanish). | 66 |
| It is hard to lure hawks with empty hands. (Danish). | 67 |
| The hen cackles in one place and lays eggs in another. (Modern Greek). | 68 |
| The herons a saint when there are no fish in sight. (Bengalese). | 69 |
| A jackdaw is ever found near to a jackdaw. (Greek). | 70 |
| A hungry kite sees a dead horse afar off. (English). | 71 |
| He expects that larks will fall ready roasted into his mouth. (French). | 72 |
| The magpie cannot leave her hopping. (Dutch). | 73 |
| Only the nightingale can understand the rose. (Marathi). | 74 |
| I have lived too near a wood to be frightened by owls. (English). | 75 |
| Speech like that of a parrot; gait like that of a peacock. (Tamil). | 76 |
| The partridge loves peas, but not those that go into the pot with it. (African). | 77 |
| The sluggard, like the peacock, is afraid of rain. (Karanese). | 78 |
| The voice of the pigeon in the spit is not like the voice of the pigeon in the tree. (African). | 79 |
| A seaman, if he carries a millstone, will have a quail out of it. (English). | 80 |
| Foster a raven and it will pluck out your eyes. (Spanish). | 81 |
| The robin and the wren are Gods cock and hen; the martin and the swallow are Gods mate and marrow. (English). | 82 |
| The sound of the bell does not drive away rooks. (Italian). | 83 |
| Sparrows should not dance with cranestheir legs are too short. (Danish). | 84 |
| It is said that the stork died while waiting for the ocean to dry in the hope of getting a supply of dried fish. (Tamil). | 85 |
| It is not for the swan to teach eaglets to sing. (Danish). | 86 |
| If wishes were thrushes, beggars would eat birds. (English). | 87 |
| As poor as Jobs turkey, that had to lean against a fence to gobble. (American). | 88 |
| Theres winter enough for a snipe and woodcock too. (English). | 89 |
| He who disturbs the wrens nest, with health he will neer be blest. (Welsh). | 90 |
| |
Fishes and Other Aquatic Animals
The fish comes to his senses after he gets into the net. (Turkish). Easterly wind and rain bring cockles here from Spain. (English). | 91 |
| It is because of his good heart that the crab has no head. (Martinique Creole). | 92 |
| He that has an eel by the tail has a very unlikely hold. (English). | 93 |
| He can wile the flounders oot o the sea. (Scotch). | 94 |
| To angle all day and catch a gudgeon at night. (English). | 95 |
| Let every herring hang by its own tail. (Irish). | 96 |
| Ye look like a rinner, quo the deil to the lobster. (Scotch). | 97 |
| A mackerel to catch a whale, a sprat to catch a mackerel. (English). | 98 |
| Theres life in a mussel as lang as it cheeps. (Scotch). | 99 |
| Oysters are not good in a month that hath not an R in it. (English). | 100 |
| A salmon from the pool, a wand from the wood, a deer from the hillsare thefts which no man was ever ashamed to own. (Gallican). | 101 |
| Like the sea-serpent (a mythical animal, not the sea-snake of the Indian and Pacific Oceans), frequently heard of but seldom seen. (English). | 102 |
The hook that caught this shad must have been baited with a pin-cushion. (English). So said because of the large number of small bones. | 103 |
| The wrecker ashore is worse than the shark at sea. (English). | 104 |
| Better the head of a sprat than the tail of a sturgeon. (English). | 105 |
| There is no catching trout with dry breeches. (Portuguese). | 106 |
| Very like a whale in a butter tub. (English). | 107 |
| |
Reptiles Including Scorpions, Snails, Leeches, Worms, etc.
Although you take a reptile on a cushion it will seek a heap of dry leaves. (Tamil). If the adder were not so dangerous, women would take it for petticoat strings. (Haitian Creole). | 108 |
| Till you are across the river, beware how you insult the mother alligator. (Haitian Creole). | 109 |
| The good, like the cobra, sometimes retain their power and conceal themselves. (Tamil). | 110 |
| The crocodile in the water and the tiger on shore both strive to break my neck. (Bengalese). | 111 |
| The frog flew into a passion and the pond knew nothing of it. (Modern Greek). | 112 |
| The leech wants to become a snake. (Mauritius Creole). | 113 |
| Better be the head of a lizard than the tail of a dragon. (Italian). | 114 |
| Whoever pats scorpions with the hand of compassion receives punishment. (Persian). | 115 |
| He that hath been bitten by a serpent fears a rope. (Hebrew). | 116 |
| The snail deserves the end of its journey. (Welsh). | 117 |
| If the snake cares to live, it doesnt journey upon the high-road. (Haitian and French Guyana Creole). | 118 |
| To the devil with so many masters, said the toad to the harrow. (French). | 119 |
| Daddy tortoise goes slow, but he gets to the goal while Daddy deer is asleep. (Louisianian Creole). | 120 |
| Like seeking feathers from a turtle. (Cingalese). | 121 |
| He that keeps malice harbours a viper in his heart. (English). | 122 |
| Sorrow is to the soul what the worm is to wood. (Turkish). | 123 |
| |
Insects Including Spiders
One grain-destroying insect will consume a thousand grains of rice. (Tamil). Bugs are all the same whether they bite or not. (Tamil). | 124 |
| What could the ant do if it had the head of a bull? (German). | 125 |
| From the same flower the bee extracts honey and the wasp gall. (Italian). | 126 |
| The beetle is a beauty in the eyes of its mother. (African). | 127 |
| The cockroach is never in the right where the fowl is concerned. (Trinidad Creole). | 128 |
| The light of the firefly is sufficient for itself only. (Marathi). | 129 |
| Nothing is ever well done in a hurry except fleeing from the plague or from quarrels and catching fleas. (Italian). | 130 |
| A drop of honey catches more flies than a hogshead of vinegar. (German). | 131 |
| Glowworms are not lanterns. (Italian). | 132 |
| When gnats swarm in January the peasant becomes a beggar. (Dutch). | 133 |
| Like a grasshopperfascinated by a lighted lamp. (Tamil). | 134 |
| It is nonsense to set a louse on a steel to bark at a tailor. (English). | 135 |
| There is no cloth cut so fine but moth will eat it. (English). | 136 |
| A carbuncle appeared on the back of a mosquito. (Tamil). | 137 |
| Friends tie their purses with spiders thread. (Italian). | 138 |
| Anger is a stone cast at a wasps nest. (Malabar). | 139 |
| |