| Proverb |
Meaning |
Location |
| To even be able to tie the devil to a pillow |
Obstinacy overcomes everything |
|
| To be a pillar-biter |
To be a religious hypocrite |
|
| To carry fire in one hand and water in the other |
To be two-faced and to stir up trouble |
|
| To bang one's head against a brick wall |
To try to achieve the impossible |
|
| One foot shod, the other bare |
Balance is paramount |
|
| The sow pulls the bung |
Negligence will be rewarded with disaster |
|
| To bell the cat |
To be indiscreet about plans that should be secret |
|
| To be armed to the teeth |
To be heavily armed |
|
| To be an iron-biter |
To be boastful/ indiscreet |
|
| One shears sheep, the other shears pigs |
One has all the advantages, the other none |
|
| Shear them but don't skin them |
Do not press your advantage too far |
|
| The herring doesn't fry here |
Things don't go according to plan |
|
| To fry the whole herring for the sake of the roe |
To do too much to achieve a little |
|
| To get the lid on the head |
To end up taking responsibility |
|
| The herring hangs by its own gills |
You must accept responsibility for your own actions |
|
| There is more in it than an empty herring |
There is more to it than meets the eye |
|
| What can smoke do to iron? |
There is no point in trying to change the unchangeable |
|
| To find the dog in the pot |
To arrive too late to prevent trouble |
|
| To sit between two stools in the ashes |
To be indecisive |
|
| To be a hen feeler |
To count one's chickens before they hatch |
|
| The scissors hang out there |
They are liable to cheat you there |
|
| To always gnaw on a single bone |
To continually talk about the same subject |
|
| It depends on the fall of the cards |
It is up to chance |
|
| The world is turned upside down |
Everything is the opposite of what it should be |
|
| Leave at least one egg in the nest |
Always have something in reserve |
|
| To shit on the world |
To despise everything |
|
| To lead each other by the nose |
To fool each other |
|
| The die is cast |
The decision is made |
|
| Fools get the best cards |
Luck can overcome intelligence |
|
| To look through one's fingers |
To be indulgent |
|
| There hangs the knife |
To issue a challenge |
|
| There stand the wooden shoes |
To wait in vain |
|
| To stick out the broom |
To have fun while the master is away |
|
| To marry under the broomstick |
To live together without marrying |
|
| To have the roof tiled with tarts |
To be living in the lap of luxury |
|
| To have a hole in one's roof |
To be simple |
|
| An old roof needs a lot of patching up |
Old things need more maintenance |
|
| The roof has lathes |
There could be eavesdroppers (The walls have ears) |
|
| To have toothache behind the ears |
To be a malingerer |
|
| To be pissing against the moon |
To waste one's time on a futile endeavour |
|
| Here hangs the pot |
It is the opposite of what it should be |
|
| To shoot a second bolt to find the first |
To repeat a foolish action |
|
| To shave the fool without lather |
To trick somebody |
|
| Two fools under one hood |
Stupidity loves company |
|
| It grows out of the window |
It can't be concealed |
|
| To play on the pillory |
To attract attention to one's shameful acts |
|
| Where the gate is open the pigs will run into the corn |
Disaster ensues from carelessness |
|
| Where the corn decreases the pig increases |
If one person gains then another must lose |
|
| To run like one's backside is on fire |
To be in great distress |
|
| He who eats fire, shits sparks |
Do not be surprised at the outcome if you attempt a dangerous venture |
|
| To hang one's cloak according to the wind |
To adapt one's viewpoint to the current opinion |
|
| To toss feathers in the wind |
To work fruitlessly |
|
| To gaze at the stork |
To waste one's time |
|
| To want to kill two flies with one stroke |
To be efficient (equivalent to today's To kill two birds with one stone) |
|
| To fall from the ox onto the ass |
To fall on hard times |
|
| To kiss the ring of the door |
To be insincere |
|
| To wipe one's backside on the door |
To treat something lightly |
|
| To go around shouldering a burden |
To imagine that things are worse than they are |
|
| One beggar pities the other standing in front of the door |
|
|
| To fish behind the net |
To miss an opportunity |
|
| Big fish eat little fish |
|
|
| To be unable to see the sun shine on the water |
To be jealous of another's success |
|
| It hangs like a privy over a ditch |
It is obvious |
|
| Anybody can see through an oak plank if there's a hole in it |
There is no point in stating the obvious |
|
| They both shit through the same hole |
They are in agreement |
|
| To throw one's money into the water |
To waste one's money |
|
| A wall with cracks will soon collapse |
Anything poorly managed will soon fail |
|
| To not care whose house is on fire as long as one can warm oneself at the blaze |
To take every opportunity regardless of the consequences to others |
|
| To drag the block |
To be deceived by a lover or to work at a pointless task |
|
| Fear makes the old woman trot |
An unexpected event can reveal unknown qualities |
|
| Horse droppings are not figs |
Don not be fooled by appearances |
|
| If the blind lead the blind both will fall in the ditch |
The is no point in being guided by others who are equally ignorant |
|
| The journey isn't yet over when one can discern the church and steeple |
Do not give up until the task is fully complete |
|
| Everything, however finely spun, finally comes to the sun |
Nothing can be hidden forever |
|
| To keep one's eye on the sail |
To stay alert, be wary |
|
| To shit on the gallows |
To be undeterred by any penalty |
|
| Where the carcass is, there fly the crows |
If the evidence points to something it's likely to be true |
|
| It is easy to sail before the wind |
If conditions are favourable it isn't difficult to achieve one's goal |
|
| Who knows why geese go barefoot? |
There is a reason for everything, though it may not be obvious |
|
| If I'm not meant to be their keeper, I'll let geese be geese |
Do not interfere in matters that are not your concern |
|
| To see bears dancing |
To be starving |
|
| Wild bears prefer each other's company |
|
| To look for the hatchet |
To try to find an excuse |
|
| Here he's with his lantern |
To finally have an opportunity to show a talent |
|
| A hatchet with a handle |
Probably signifies "the whole thing" |
|
| To blow in the ear |
To spread gossip |
|
| To chalk up |
To make sure to remember |
|
| The meat on the spit must be basted |
Certain things need constant attention |
|
| There is no turning the spit with him |
He is uncooperative |
|
| To sit on hot coals |
To be impatient |
|
| To catch fish without a net |
To profit from the work of others |
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