Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
You love a nothing when you love an ingrate.
Plautus
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Plautus
Actor
Comedy Writer
Playwright
Poet
Titus Maccius Plautus
Nothing
Love
Ingrates
Ingratitude
More quotes by Plautus
Not every age is fit for childish sports.
Plautus
Little do you know what a gloriously uncertain thing law is.
Plautus
Fire is next akin to smoke.
Plautus
In everything the middle road is best.
Plautus
If you spend a thing you can not have it. [Lat., Non tibi illud apparere si sumas potest.]
Plautus
We should try to succeed by merit, not by favor. He who does well will always have patrons enough. [Lat., Virtute ambire oportet, non favitoribus. Sat habet favitorum semper, qui recte facit.]
Plautus
Your tittle-tattlers, and those who listen to slander, by my good will should all be hanged - the former by their tongues, the latter by the ears.
Plautus
Courage is what preserves our liberty, safety, life, and our homes and parents, our country and children. Courage comprises all things.
Plautus
Tattletales, and those who listen to their slander, by my good will, should all be hanged. The former by their tongues, the latter by their ears. [Lat., Homines qui gestant, quique auscultant crimina, si meo arbitratu liceat, omnes pendeant gestores linguis, auditores auribus.]
Plautus
Know this, that troubles come swifter than the things we desire.
Plautus
Man's fortune is usually changed at once life is changeable. [Lat., Actutum fortunae solent mutarier varia vita est.]
Plautus
It is only when we have lost them that we fully appreciate our blessings.
Plautus
If you squander on a holyday, you will want on a workday unless you have been sparing.
Plautus
Feast to-day makes fast to-morrow. Lat.
Plautus
No man will be respected by others who is despised by his own relatives.
Plautus
Man is not man, but a wolf to those he does not know.
Plautus
We are pouring our words into a sieve, and lose our labor. [Lat., In pertusum ingerimus dicta dolium, operam ludimus.]
Plautus
Let a man who wants to find abundance of employment procure a woman and a ship: for no two things do produce more trouble if you begin to equip them neither are these two things ever equipped enough.
Plautus
If I can only keep my good name, I shall have riches enough.
Plautus
I much prefer a compliment, even if insincere, to sincere criticism.
Plautus