Sunday, June 17, 2012

GREAT QUOTES = FROM ANCIENT SAYINGS = (Translated from Telugu)


GREAT QUOTES

FROM

ANCIENT SAYINGS

(Translated from Telugu)

The quotes below are extracted from ancient sayings in the Indian Language of Telugu (spoken in Andhra Pradesh of India). There are many more such wise sayings in Indian languages.

Each of these short and some sharp sayings reflect every day lessons of life, from which, there is a lot any intelligent man can learn.

More such will be extracted in due course and placed in this Blog. Please do enjoy these and give your comments and suggestions.

Ø Time passes; but WORD stays.
Ø If fence eats the Crop, what can the farmer do?
Ø Nothing in the world - that is not a medicine .
Ø Togetherness makes for Greatest strength .
Ø No one knows his own back - as much as others do .
Ø If you say, EAT, the Frog is angry. If you say, don't eat, the cobra is angry. .
Ø Each one loves his own madness .
Ø Full Moon rays fall exactly where the Hot Sun rays fall. They don't differentiate .
Ø Never seek to judge the roots of (i) a sage (ii) a river or (iii) a tree . Enjoy their benevolence .
Ø No use winning the country - if you can't win at home .
Ø The house is - as the house wife is
Ø Your every movement is Dance; your every word is song (when I am in Love)
Ø Hunger knows no taste. Sleep knows no comforts. Lust knows no shame. .
Ø The Monkey took the intoxicating drink and stepped on the thorn. Then, the scorpion has bitten it. Can it remain quiet?
Ø If you wait for the waves to stop, you can never take bath .
Ø Barking Dogs don't Bite .
Ø Don't use Pick Axe where the finger nail is enough .
Ø Mother looks at your stomach. Wife at your pocket.
Ø Salt makes other eatables tasty.
Ø Suspicion can travel anywhere .
Ø Suspicion was born first. Woman next. ( Man's problem)
Ø Even a mother does not feed you - until you express your hunger.
Ø Do not leave out remains of (i) fire (ii) debt (iii) enmity and (iv) wounds. They grow big again.
Ø Fire God is a Friend in winter; enemy in summer; He doesn't change; your need changes.
Ø If the tongue is good, the town is good

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