, , . .
Ill wound is cured, not an ill name
, - . oak is not felled
Ill-gotten gains never prosper
. . . : ,
Ill-gotten, ill-spent
- . .
In every beginning think of the end
-, (. . , ). . . , . ,
In for a penny, in for a pound
, . (. . , , .) . , . , ,
In the country of the blind one-eyed man is a king
. . - . .
In the end things will mend
. . -
In the evening one may praise the day
. . ,
Iron hand in a velvet glove
. . ,
It is a good horse that never stumbles
, . : , . . ,
It is a long lane that has no turning
. : , , . . ; .
. ,
It is a poor mouse that has only one hole
, . . ,
It is a silly fish, that is caught twice with the same bait
, . .
It is an ill bird that fouls its own nest
, . .
It is an ill wind that blows nobody good
, . . .
It is easy to swim if another holds up your chin
, . : . . ,
It is enough to make a cat laugh
, . . .
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It is good fishing in troubled waters
. .
It is never too late to learn
. . . ,
It is no use crying over spilt milk
. .
It is the first step that costs
. . . , .
It never rains but it pours
, . . - . ,
It takes all sorts to make a world
. .
It's as broad as it's long
, . . , .
It's no use pumping a dry well
. . .
It's one thing to flourish and another to fight
() - . . , . , .
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