their
All men have their price. [ Ascribed to Walpole ]
Even cities have their graves. [ Longfellow ]
Their rage supplies them with weapons. [ Virgil ]
Mortals are equal; their mask differs. [ Voltaire ]
Few men are admired by their servants. [ Montaigne ]
Stern men with empires in their brains. [ Lowell ]
Coming events cast their shadows before. [ Thomas Campbell ]
Old maids sweeten their tea with scandal. [ H. W. Shaw ]
Many owe their fortunes to their enviers. [ Proverb ]
Fairies use flowers for their charactery. [ William Shakespeare ]
They enhance their favours by their words. [ Plin ]
Their flag was furled, and mute their drum. [ Sir Walter Scott ]
Men shut their doors against a setting sun. [ William Shakespeare ]
Women know not the whole of their coquetry. [ La Rochefoucauld ]
The little birds have God for their caterer. [ Cervantes ]
Nature teaches beasts to know their friends. [ William Shakespeare ]
Fools carry their daggers in their open mouths. [ H. W. Shaw ]
They make their fortune who are stout and wise. [ Tasso ]
Many have reached their fate while reading fate. [ Seneca ]
Call them again, my lord, and accept their suit. [ William Shakespeare ]
How blessings brighten as they take their flight! [ Young ]
Books are the immortal sons deifying their sires. [ Plato ]
Even the best things are not equal to their fame. [ Thoreau ]
Lawless are they that make their wills their law. [ Rochefoucauld ]
Let women paint their eyes with tints of chastity. [ Tertullian ]
Some had rather lose their friend than their jest. [ English Proverb, collected by George Herbert ]
Wolves may lose their teeth, but not their nature. [ Proverb ]
Gifts come from above in their own peculiar forms. [ Goethe ]
When clouds are seen, wise men put on their cloaks. [ William Shakespeare ]
Their numbers protect them and their compact array. [ Juv ]
Men give away nothing so liberally as their advice. [ Rochefoucauld ]
All men's faces are true, whatsoever their hands are. [ William Shakespeare ]
Bad men excuse their faults; good men will leave them. [ Ben Jonson ]
When my friends are one-eyed, I look at their profile. [ Joubert ]
All who know their own minds know not their own hearts. [ Rochefoucauld ]
The vicious count their years; the virtuous their acts. [ Dr. Johnson ]
Great events have sent before them their announcements. [ Calderon ]
Whose god is their belly and whose glory is their shame. [ Bible ]
Misers put their back and their belly into their pocket. [ Proverb ]
Whatsoever is worthy of their love is worth their anger. [ Sir J. Denham ]
Misfortunes have their dignity and their redeeming power. [ George S. Hillard ]
Not kings alone - the people, too, have their flatterers. [ Mirabeau ]
Fools are apt to imitate only the defects of their betters. [ Swift ]
Women always find their bitterest foes among their own sex. [ J. Petit-Senn ]
Men more easily renounce their interests than their tastes. [ Rochefoucauld ]
Birds are entangled by their feet, and men by their tongues. [ Proverb ]
The vicious obey their passions, as slaves do their masters. [ Diogenes ]
We make others judgment our own by frequenting their society. [ Thomas Fuller ]
Men take less care of their conscience than their reputation. [ Proverb ]
We come to know best what men are, in their worse jeopardies. [ Daniel ]
Our actions are our own; their consequences belong to Heaven. [ Francis ]
Some will rather lose their best friend than their worst joke. [ Proverb ]
Bodies are slow of growth, but are rapid in their dissolution. [ Tacitus ]
Men must endure their going hence. Even as their coming hither. [ William Shakespeare ]
Danger levels man and brute, and all are fellows in their need. [ Byron ]
Bees that have honey in their mouths, have stings in their tails. [ Proverb ]
Women can less easily surmount their coquetry than their passions. [ Rochefoucauld ]
Men's evil manners live in brass; their virtues we write in water. [ Shakespeare ]
The less people speak of their greatness, the more we think of it. [ Lord Bacon ]
Men never think their fortune too great, nor their wit too little. [ Proverb ]
Gods, that never change their state, vary oft their love and hate. [ Waller ]
Experience is the name men give to their follies, or their sorrows. [ A. de Musset ]
There was speech in their dumbness, language in their very gesture. [ William Shakespeare ]
Time's chariot-wheels make their carriage-road in the fairest face. [ Rochefoucauld ]
People come to look; their greatest pleasure is to feast their eyes. [ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe ]
A good man is kinder to his enemy than bad men are to their friends. [ Bishop Hall ]
Men blush less for their crimes than for their weaknesses and vanity. [ La Bruyere ]
The more women look in their glass the less they look to their house. [ English Proverb, collected by George Herbert ]
Most men employ their first years so as to make their last miserable. [ Proverb ]
Lovers complain of their hearts, but the distemper is in their heads. [ Proverb ]
They do well, or do their duty, who with alacrity do what they ought. [ La Bruyere ]
Poor men seek meat for their stomach, rich men stomach for their meat. [ Proverb ]
Ambiguous things that ape goats in their visage, women in their shape. [ Byron ]
The plants look up to heaven, from whence they have their nourishment. [ Shakespeare ]
Persuasive, yet denying eyes, all eloquent with language of their own. [ Locke ]
Commonly they use their feet for defence whose tongue is their weapon. [ Sir P. Sidney ]
Thieves for their robbery have authority, when judges steal themselves. [ William Shakespeare ]
The benediction of these covering heavens fall on their heads like dew. [ William Shakespeare ]
The wisdom of nations lies in their proverbs, which are brief and pithy. [ William Penn ]
The turnpike road to people's hearts, I find, lies through their mouths. [ Dr. John Wolcott ]
Their little minim forms arrayed in all the tricksy pomp of fairy pride. [ Drake ]
The Grecian ladies counted their age from their marriage, not their birth. [ Homer ]
In nature things move violently to their place, and calmly in their place. [ Bacon ]
Many men owe the grandeur of their lives to their tremendous difficulties. [ Spurgeon ]
Men are contented to be laughed at for their wit, but not for their folly. [ Swift ]
O, that men should put an enemy in their mouths to steal away their brains! [ William Shakespeare ]
Women are often ruined by their sensitiveness, and saved by their coquetry. [ Mlle. Azais ]
The moderns cannot reach their beauties, but can avoid their imperfections. [ Addison ]
Like saintly vestals, pale in prayer, their pure breath sanctifies the air. [ Julia C. R. Dorr ]
The more women look into their glass, the less they look into their hearts. [ Proverb ]
The wit of most women goes more to strengthen their folly than their reason. [ La Roche ]
It is our relation to circumstances that determines their influence upon us. [ Bovee ]
All great men find eternity affirmed in the very promise of their faculties. [ Emerson ]
On this side and on that, men see their friends drop off like leaves in autumn. [ Blair ]
Blest is he whose heart is the home of the great dead and their great thoughts. [ Bailey ]
Men should allow others excellences, to preserve a modest opinion of their own. [ Barrow ]
If ye forgive men their trespasses, your Heavenly Father will also forgive you. [ Bible ]
So let them ease their hearts with prate of equal rights, which man never knew. [ Byron ]
They whose guilt within their bosoms lie imagine every eye beholds their blame. [ William Shakespeare ]
It is not virtuous women who are so ready to report suspicion of their sisters. [ Mme. de Krudener ]
Children will imitate their fathers in their vices, seldom in their repentance. [ Spu rgeon ]
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