编号 |
条目 |
答案 |
1801
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Many straws may bind an elephant.
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1802
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Many wells, many buckets.
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1803
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Many words cut (or hurt) more than swords.
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1804
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March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb.
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1805
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Marriage comes by destiny.
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1806
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Marriage goes by contrasts.
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1807
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Marriage is a lottery.
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1808
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Marriage is a lottery with more blanks than prizes.
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1809
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Marriaage is the bloom or blight of all men's happiness.
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1810
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Marriage makes or mars a man.
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1811
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Marriage! Nothing else demands so much from a man!
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1812
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Marry in haste, and repent at leisure.
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1813
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Marry in lent, and you'll live to repent.
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1814
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Marry your son when you will, your daughter when you.
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1815
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Master should be soetimes blind and sometimes deaf.
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1816
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Measure another's corn by one's own bushel.
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1817
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Measure for measure.
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1818
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Measure is treasure.
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1819
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Measure thrice before you cut once.
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1820
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Medicines are not meant to live on.
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1821
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Men are mortal.
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1822
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Men, at soome time, are masters of their fates.
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1823
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Men know where they were born, not where they shall die.
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1824
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Men love to hear well of themselves.
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1825
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Men may meet but mountains never.
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1826
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Men of courage, men of sense, and menof letters are frequent: but a true gentleman is what one seldom seen.
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1827
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Men too seldom see their own faults.
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1828
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Mere words will not fill a bushel.
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1829
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Merry is he that hath nought to lose.
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1830
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Merry meet, merry part.
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1831
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Method will teach you to win time
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1832
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Mickle power makes many enemies.
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1833
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Might is (or makes or overcomes) right.
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1834
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Mills of God grind slowly but sure.
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1835
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Miracels are to those who believe in them.
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1836
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Mischief has swift wings.
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1837
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Misers put their back and their belly into their pockets.
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1838
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Misery acquaints men with strange bedfellows.
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1839
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Misery loves company.
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1840
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Misery makes strange bedfellows.
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1841
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Misfortune comes on wings and departs on foot.
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1842
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Misfortune is a good teacher.
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1843
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Misfortunes come at night.
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1844
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Misfortunes come on horseback and go away on foot.
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1845
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Misfortunes (or Hardships) never (or seldom) come alone (or singly).
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1846
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Misfortunes tell us what fortune is.
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1847
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Misfortunes test the sincerity of friends.
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1848
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Mock not a cobbler for his black thumbs.
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1849
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Moderation in all things is the best of rules.
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1850
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Modesty is not only and ornament, but also a guard to virtue.
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1851
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Modesty is the ornament of woman.
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1852
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Money answers all things.
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1853
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Money begets (or breeds or gets) money.
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1854
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Money borrowed is soon sorrowed
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1855
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Money burns a hole in his pocket.
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1856
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Money calls, but does not stay: It is round and rolls away.
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1857
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Money can buy the devil himself.
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1858
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Money can move even the gods.
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1859
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Money doesn't grow on trees.
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1860
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Money has no smell.
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1861
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Money is a bottomless sea, in which honour, conscience, and truth may be drowned.
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1862
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Money is a good servant, but a bad master.
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1863
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Money is neither good nor bad, but all depends on what use is made of it.
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1864
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Money is often lost for want of money.
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1865
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Money is something, but no everything.
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1866
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Money is the key that opens all doors.
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1867
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Money is the root of all evil.
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1868
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Money is the sinews of war.
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1869
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Money makes the mare to go.
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1870
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Money often unmakes the men who make it.
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1871
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Money spent on the brain is never spent in vain.
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1872
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Money talks.
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1873
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More die by food than by famine.
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1874
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More haste, less speed.
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1875
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More of our worries come from within than from without.
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1876
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More worship the rising than the setting sun.
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1877
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Most things have two handles.
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1878
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Mother's darlings are but milksop heroes.
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1879
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Mountains look beautiful from a distance.
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1880
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Much cry and little wool.
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1881
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Much water runs by the mill that the miller knows not of.
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1882
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Much will have more.
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1883
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Murder will out.
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1884
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Music hath charms to soothe the savage beast.
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1885
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Music is the eye of the ear.
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1886
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Music is the medicine of the breaking heart.
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1887
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Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.
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1888
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My son is my son, till he hath got him a wife; but my daughter's my daughter all the days of her life.
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1889
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Napoleon himself was once a crying baby.
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1890
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Nature abhors a vacuum.
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1891
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Nature has given us two ears, two eyes, and but one tongue, to the end that we should hear and see more than we speak.
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1892
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Nature is the glass reflecting truth.
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1893
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Nature teaches us to love our friends but religion our enemies.
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1894
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Nature, time, and patience are the three great physicians.
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1895
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Nature will have its course.
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1896
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Naughty boys sometimes make good men.
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1897
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Necessity and opportunity may make a coward valiant.
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1898
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Necessity (or Need) has (or knows) no law.
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1899
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Necessity is the mother of invention
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1900
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Necessity knows no law.
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