Mieder | English Proverbs | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Deutsch, 156 Seiten

Reihe: Reclam premium Sprachtraining

Mieder English Proverbs

Reclam premium Sprachtraining

E-Book, Deutsch, 156 Seiten

Reihe: Reclam premium Sprachtraining

ISBN: 978-3-15-961956-9
Verlag: Reclam Verlag
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark



Wer eine Sprache richtig gut lernen möchte, kommt um ihre Sprichwörter nicht herum. Das Buch enthält rund 1200 Sprichwörter, die sprachlich und sachlich erläutert wie auch zeitlich eingeordnet werden. Eine aufschlussreiche Einleitung führt in den Band ein, die abschließenden Literaturhinweise bieten Anknüpfungspunkte für eine noch intensivere Auseinandersetzung mit dem Thema. Von »Absence makes the heart grow fonder« bis »Zeal without knowledge is the sister of folly«. - Redewendungen verstehen und anwenden lernen - Alphabetisch angeordnet für schnelles, gezieltes Nachschlagen - Mit Worterklärungen für ein besseres Grundverständnis der englischen Wendungen Niveau B1-C1 (GER)
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Weitere Infos & Material


C
116. Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s. (1601)   117. You cannot have your cake and eat it. (1546)   118. He who can, does; he who cannot, teaches. (1903)   119. Paddle your own canoe. (1802)   120. If the cap fits, wear it. (1600)   121. Lucky at cards, unlucky in love. (1738)   122. Care killed the cat. (1598)   123. A cat has nine lives. (1546)   124. A cat in gloves catches no mice. (1573)   125. A cat may look at a king. (1546)   126. The cat would eat fish, but would not wet her feet. (c. 1380)   127. When the cat’s away, the mice will play. (1607)   128. All cats are gray in the dark. (c. 1549)   129. Keep no more cats than will catch mice. (1673)   130. Similar causes produce similar effects. (1689)   131. A chain is no stronger than its weakest link. (1868)   132. A change is as good as a rest. (1895)   133. Change of pasture makes fat calves. (1546)   134. Charity begins at home. (c. 1383)   135. It is as cheap sitting as standing. (1666)   136. Cheats never prosper. (c. 1612)   137. Two cheats make an even bargain. (1748)   138. Don’t count your chickens before they are hatched. (c. 1570)   139. A burnt child dreads the fire. (c. 1250)   140. It is a wise child that knows its own father. (1584)   141. Many kiss the child for the nurse’s sake. (c. 1470)   142. Praise the child, and you make love to the mother. (1829)   143. The child is the father of the man. (1671)   144. Children and fools tell the truth. (c. 1425)   145. Children are certain cares, but uncertain comforts. (1639)   146. Children are poor men’s riches. (1541)   147. Children should be seen and not heard. (c. 1400)   148. A chip of the old block. (c. 1626)   149. There is small choice in rotten apples. (1594)   150. Christmas comes but once a year. (1573)   151. The nearer the church, the farther from God. (1303)   152. He that drinks his cider alone, let him catch his horse alone. (1736)   153. Circumstances alter cases. (1678)   154. Small circumstances produce great events. (1774)   155. Civility costs nothing. (1706)   156. Cleanliness is next to godliness. (1605)   157. Hasty climbers have sudden falls. (1563)   158. Every cloud has a silver lining. (1634)   159. All clouds don’t bring rain. (1584)   160. Cut your coat according to your cloth. (1546)   161. Coaxing is better than driving. (1814)   162. Let the cobbler stick to his last. (1539)   163. Every cock will crow upon his own dunghill. (c. 1250)   164. Cocks make free with the horse’s corn. (1797)   165. Feed a cold and starve a fever. (1852)   166. A ragged colt may make a good horse. (1520)   167. Easy come, easy go. (1650)   168. First come, first served. (c. 1390)   169. Light come, light go. (c. 1390)   170. Quickly come, quickly go. (1583)   171. What is to come will come. (1809)   172. It is good to have company in trouble. (c. 1349)   173. The company makes the feast. (1653)   174. Two is company, but three’s a crowd. (1869)   175. Comparisons are odious. (c. 1440)   176. He that complies against his will is of his own opinion still. (1678)   177. Open confession is good for the soul. (c. 1641)   178. Confidence is a plant of slow growth. (1776)   179. A clear conscience laughs at false accusations. (1580)   180. A guilty conscience needs no accuser. (1597)   181. Conscience makes cowards of us all. (1594)   182. He is a poor cook that cannot lick his own...


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