Пословица "There's many a slip between the cup and the lip" с переводом
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Перевод на русский язык
Многое может произойти за то время, пока подносишь кубок к губам.Пример употребления (предложение)
Это бабушка надвое сказала. Наперед не загадывай.Сохранить себе или поделиться:
Другие английские пословицы на букву T
- The furthest way about is the nearest way home
- The tongue of idle persons is never idle
- To eat the calf in the cow's belly
- The moon does not heed the barking of dogs
- The best fish smell when they are three days old
- There is no place like home
- The chain is no stronger than its weakest link
- The cobbler should stick to his last
- To kill two birds with one stone
- The morning sun never lasts a day
- To err is human
- The leopard cannot change its spots
- Too much knowledge makes the head bald
- The cat shuts its eyes when stealing cream
- To be head over ears in debt
- To cast prudence to the winds
- The cask savours of the first fill
- To find a mare's nest
- To have a finger in the pie
- Too swift arrives as tardy as too slow
- To save one's bacon
- To take counsel of one's pillow
- Time and tide wait for no man
- They must hunger in winter that will not work in summer
- The beggar may sing before the thief (before a footpad)
- The more the merrier
- To wear one's heart upon one's sleeve
- To buy a pig in a poke
- The mill cannot grind with the water that is past
- To go through fire and water (through thick and thin)
- To come out dry
- To look for a needle in a haystack
- To add fuel (oil) to the fire (flames)
- To wash one's dirty linen in public
- There is a place for everything, and everything in its place
- The falling out of lovers is the renewing of love
- The wind cannot be caught in a net
- To fish in troubled waters
- To send (carry) owls to Athens
- The game is not worth the candle
- There is no smoke without fire
- To lay by for a rainy day
- To throw dust in somebody's eyes
- To give a lark to catch a kite
- The fat is in the fire
- To weep over an onion
- To put off till Doomsday
- That which one least anticipates soonest comes to pass
- There is no rose without a thorn
- The last straw breaks the camel's back
- That cock won't fight
- The evils we bring on ourselves are hardest to bear
- Time works wonders
- The dogs bark, but the caravan goes on
- To take the bull by the horns
- The devil knows many things because he is old
- To be in one's birthday suit
- The cobbler's wife is the worst shod
- To beat about the bush
- To come out with clean hands
- To come away none the wiser
- To throw straws against the wind
- The first blow is half the battle
- To have rats in the attic
- To love somebody (something) as the devil loves holy water
- Two heads are better than one
- Truth lies at the bottom of a well
- The last drop makes the cup run over
- The nearer the bone, the sweeter the flesh
- The tailor makes the man
- To work with the left hand
- To set the wolf to keep the sheep
- The darkest hour is that before the dawn
- To make the cup run over
- To treat somebody with a dose of his own medicine
- The rotten apple injures its neighbours
- The cat would eat fish and would not wet her paws
- The higher the ape goes, the more he shows his tail
- The way (the road) to hell is paved with good intentions
- To get out of bed on the wrong side
- Things past cannot be recalled
- Take care of the pence and the pounds will take care of themselves
- To tell tales out of school
- To hit the nail on the head
- The end justifies the means
- To make both ends meet
- To run with the hare and hunt with the hounds
- The darkest place is under the candlestick
- To call off the dogs
- There's no use crying over spilt milk
- To put (set) the cart before the horse
- To live from hand to mouth
- To come off with flying colours
- To cut one's throat with a feather
- To draw water in a sieve
- That's a horse of another colour
- To come off cheap
- Two blacks do not make a white
- There is no fire without smoke
- The voice of one man is the voice of no one
- That's where the shoe pinches!
- True blue will never stain
- To flog a dead horse
- The more haste, the less speed
- The scalded dog fears cold water
- To carry coals to Newcastle
- The exception proves the rule
- The devil lurks behind the cross
- Think today and speak tomorrow
- Tomorrow come never
- There are more ways to the wood than one
- To go for wool and come home shorn
- True coral needs no painter's brush
- The pitcher goes often to the well but is broken at last
- To stick to somebody like a leech
- Too much water drowned the miller
- To use a steam-hammer to crack nuts
- Time cures all things
- To call a spade a spade
- To strain at a gnat and swallow a camel
- To drop a bucket into an empty well
- The longest day has an end
- To know everything is to know nothing
- They are hand and glove
- To beat the air
- The busiest man finds the most leisure
- There are lees to every wine
- There is no rule without an exception
- To fiddle while Rome is burning
- Truth is stranger than fiction
- The remedy is worse than the disease
- To know on which side one's bread is buttered
- To pour water into a sieve
- To cast pearls before swine
- The work shows the workman
- The heart that once truly loves never forgets
- The mountain has brought forth a mouse
- Too many cooks spoil the broth
- To pay one back in one's own coin
- Tarred with the same brush
- Time is money
- To pull the devil by the tail
- The Dutch have taken Holland!
- To put a spoke in somebody's wheel
- The best fish swim near the bottom
- The camel going to seek horns lost his ears
- Too much of a good thing is good for nothing
- There is more than one way to kill a cat
- The receiver is as bad as the thief
- The proof of the pudding is in the eating
- The end crowns the work
- Time is the great healer
- To cry with one eye and laugh with the other
- The devil rebuking sin
- To build a fire under oneself
- Truth comes out of the mouths of babes and sucklings
- Tastes differ
- To pull the chestnuts out of the fire for somebody
- The best is oftentimes the enemy of the good
- The devil is not so black as he is painted
- To rob one's belly to cover one's back
- To be up to the ears in love
- To measure another man's foot by one's own last
- Those who live in glass houses should not throw stones
- To lock the stable-door after the horse is stolen
- To throw a stone in one's own garden
- To angle with a silver hook
- To plough the sand
- The pot calls the kettle black
- To kick against the pricks
- Two is company, but three is none
- Tell that to the marines
- The early bird catches the worm
- To be wise behind the hand
- To make (to turn) the air blue
- To measure other people's corn by one's own bushel
- To make a mountain out of a molehill
- The cap fits
- To fit like a glove
- To come off with a whole skin
- To teach the dog to bark
- To be born with a silver spoon in one's mouth
- To cook a hare before catching him
- To draw (pull) in one's horns
- The face is the index of the mind
- To bring grist to somebody's mill
- Take us as you find us
- To know what's what
- To roll in money
- To fight with one's own shadow