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If you speak insults you will hear them also.
Plautus
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Plautus
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Titus Maccius Plautus
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Insults
Insult
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This is the great fault of wine it first trips up the feet: it is a cunning wrestler.
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Things we do not expect, happen more frequently than we wish.
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Property is unstable, and youth perishes in a moment. Life itself is held in the grinning fangs of Death, Yet men delay to obtain release from the world. Alas, the conduct of mankind is surprising.
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Feast to-day makes fast to-morrow. Lat.
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No man has perpetual good fortune. [Lat., Nulli est homini perpetuum bonum.]
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This is the great evil in wine, it first seizes the feet it is a cunning wrestler. [Lat., Magnum hoc vitium vino est, Pedes captat primum luctator dolosu est.]
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We are pouring our words into a sieve, and lose our labor. [Lat., In pertusum ingerimus dicta dolium, operam ludimus.]
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Where there are friends there is wealth.
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In everything the middle road is best.
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You little know what a ticklish thing it is to go to law. [Lat., Nescis tu quam meticulosa res sit ire ad judicem.]
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The Bell never rings of itself unless some one handles or moves it it is dumb. [Lat., Nunquam aedepol temere tinniit tintinnabulum Nisi quis illud tractat aut movet, mutum est, tacet.]
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To blow and to swallow at the same time is not easy I cannot at the same time be here and also there. [Lat., Simul flare sorbereque haud facile Est: ego hic esse et illic simul, haud potui.]
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I count him lost, who is lost to shame.
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No blessing lasts forever.
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I much prefer a compliment, even if insincere, to sincere criticism.
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Modesty should accompany youth.
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Men understand the worth of blessings only when they have lost them.
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And so it happens oft in many instances more good is done without our knowledge than by us intended. [Lat., Itidemque ut saepe jam in multis locis, Plus insciens quis fecit quam prodens boni.]
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Not by age but by capacity is wisdom acquired.
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I am myself my own commander. [Lat., Egomet sum mihi imperator.]
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