birds of a feather will flock together. To be too intimate with sinners, is to intimate that
you are sinners. 1828 BULWER-LYTTON Pelham III. xv. It is literally true in the
systematised roguery of London, that ‘birds of a feather flock together.’ 2001 Washington
Times 15 July D7 Birds of a feather flock together, so the second thing you should do is
find another friend who’s less troubled than the first. associates; human nature;
similarity and dissimilarity
Little BIRDS that can sing and won’t sing must be made to sing
1678 J. RAY English Proverbs (ed. 2) 343 The bird that can sing and will not sing
must be made to sing. 1846 DICKENS Cricket on Hearth ii. ‘The bird that can sing and
won’t sing, must be made to sing, they say,’ grumbled Tackleton. ‘What about the owl
that can’t sing, and oughtn’t to sing, and will sing?’ 1888 A. QUILLER-COUCH Troy
Town i. ‘A little music might perhaps leave a pleasant taste.’.. ‘Come, Sophy! Remember
the proverb about little birds that can sing and won’t sing?’ 1904 G. K. CHESTERTON
Napoleon of Notting Hill II. i. When the disdainful oligarchs declined to join in the songs
of the men of the Broadway .., the great Republican leader, with his rough humour, said
the words which are written in gold upon his monument, ‘Little birds that can sing and
won’t sing, must be made to sing.’ 1952 J. KNOX Little Benders 18 Heaven wasn’t so far
away when you could do your own singing about it. Mama believed that and many a time
she said, ‘A body who can sing and won’t sing ought to be made to sing.’ obstinacy;
speech and silence
bite see (noun) a BLEATING sheep loses a bite; every DOG is allowed one bite; (verb) a
BARKING dog never bites; BIG fleas have little fleas upon their backs to bite them; DEAD
men don’t bite.
The man who has once been BITTEN by the snake fears every piece of rope
Chinese proverb, also found in Japan.
1937 H. H. HART 700 Chinese Proverbs (1960) no. 527 One year bitten by a snake,
for three years afraid of a grass rope. 1981 DALAI LAMA quoted in Observer 5 Apr.
(online) Frankly speaking, it is difficult to trust the Chinese. Once bitten by a snake you
feel suspicious even when you see a piece of rope. 1995 E. C. SYMMES Netsuke 94 The
snake appears in many Japanese proverbs—the man who has once been bitten by the
snake fears every piece of rope, or ‘once bitten, twice shy.’ 2004 New York Times 25 June
9 (online) China’s chief trade negotiator, Vice Premier Wu Yi, cited a Chinese proverb,
‘Once bitten by a snake, one is terrified of the mere sight of a piece of rope.’ experience