Week - 1 |
What is a proverb? |
Week - 2 |
History of the proverb |
Week - 3 |
What is an idiom? |
Week - 4 |
History of the idiom |
Week - 5 |
Examples of proverbs and idioms |
Week - 6 |
play devil's advocate |
Week - 7 |
Rome n'est plus dans Rome |
Week - 8 |
Nul n'est prophete en son pays |
Week - 9 |
Se mettre sur son trente et un |
Week - 10 |
Nourri dans le sérail/
Sésame, ouvre-toi! |
Week - 11 |
Un homme averti en vaut deux, Un tiens vaut mieux que deux tu auras, Vouloir, c'est pouvoir. |
Week - 12 |
After the rain, good weather, Gone with the wind, Good blood cannot lie, Each for himself God for all, Charbonnier is master in his own house, The dogs bark, the caravan passes, Thing promised, Thing due, |
Week - 13 |
A rolling stone gathers no moss, Who has drunk will drink, Who loves well punishes well, Who risks nothing gains nothing, Two opinions are better than one, Only the truth hurts, Far from |
Week - 14 |
At night, all the cats are gray, An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs, Whoever laughs last will laugh well, All new, all beautiful, One lost, ten found, A swallow |