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Let not your expenditure exceed your income.
Plautus
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Plautus
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Titus Maccius Plautus
Expenditure
Expenditures
Exceed
Income
More quotes by Plautus
He is a friend who, in dubious circumstances, aids in deeds when deeds are necessary.
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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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There's no such thing, you know, as picking out the best woman: it's only a question of comparative badness, brother.
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I count him lost, who is lost to shame.
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It is only when we have lost them that we fully appreciate our blessings.
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He whom the gods love dies young, while he is in health, has his senses and his judgments sound.
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No man will be respected by others who is despised by his own relatives.
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It is well for one to know more than he says.
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No man has perpetual good fortune. [Lat., Nulli est homini perpetuum bonum.]
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It is sheer folly to take unwilling hounds to the chase.
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The gods confound the man who first found out How to distinguish hours! Confound him, too, Who in this place set up a sun-dial, To cut and hack my days so wretchedly Into small portions.
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Men understand the worth of blessings only when they have lost them.
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I know that we women are all justly accounted praters they say in the present day that there never was in any age such a wonder to be found as a dumb woman. [Lat., Nam multum loquaces merito omnes habemus, Nec mutam profecto repertam ullam esse Hodie dicunt mulierem ullo in seculo.]
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Know not what you know, and see not what you see. [Lat., Etiam illud quod scies nesciveris Ne videris quod videris.]
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There can be no profit, if the outlay exceeds it. [Non enim potest quaestus consistere, si eum sumptus superat.]
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For nobody is curious, who isn't malevolent.
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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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Consider the little mouse, how sagacious an animal it is which never entrusts its life to one hole only.
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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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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.
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