231 lines
37 KiB
CSV
231 lines
37 KiB
CSV
"proverb","valid","meta_template","notes"
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"A big wife and a big barn, will never do a man any harm.","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns are people/roles (wife, man). About social roles and marriage."
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"A merry companion is music on a journey.","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person/role (companion). About social relationships."
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"A false friend and a shadow stay only while the sun shines.","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person/role (friend). About human character/loyalty."
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"All is fair in love and war, but friendship there is truth.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concepts (love, war, friendship, truth). No concrete swappable nouns."
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"A clock will run without watching it.","FALSE","NONE","Only one concrete noun (clock). Meaning is about autonomy/trust, not object relationships."
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"A good neighbor, a found treasure!","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person/role (neighbor). About social relationships."
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"A friend to everyone is a friend to nobody.","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns are people/roles (friend). About human social behavior."
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"A small leak will sink a great ship.","TRUE","causal_chain","Small defect (leak) cascades to big consequence (ship sinking). Nouns swappable: a small crack will collapse a great wall. A=leak, B=ship."
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"A living dog is better than a dead lion.","FALSE","NONE","Meaning depends on the cultural symbolism of dog (lowly) vs lion (noble). Swapping nouns breaks the metaphor about humility vs pride."
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"A good wife is the best household furniture.","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person/role (wife). About social roles."
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"A pebble and a diamond are alike to a blind man.","FALSE","NONE","Primary actor is a person (blind man). About human perception/disability. Nouns aren't freely swappable without the specific blindness context."
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"An arrogant bug is a cocky roach.","TRUE","false_equivalence","A=arrogant bug, B=cocky roach. Both insects, differ in specificity. A {A} is just a {B} with {P}. Nouns swappable: a fancy hat is a decorated cap."
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"Better an hour early and stand and wait than a moment behind time.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concepts (time, punctuality). No concrete swappable nouns."
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"Better a dollar earned than ten inherited.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concepts (earning vs inheriting). Only one concrete noun type (dollar). About human work ethic."
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"Better to ask twice than lose your way once.","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (asking, navigation). No concrete nouns to swap."
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"Better bowlegs than no legs at all.","FALSE","NONE","About human body parts. Not about object relationships. Only one noun (legs)."
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"Better to heaven in rags than to hell in embroidery.","FALSE","NONE","About morality and abstract concepts (heaven, hell). Religious/moral teaching."
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"Curses, like chickens, come home to roost.","FALSE","NONE","Core meaning is about abstract concept (curses/karma). Chickens are a simile vehicle, not a swappable structural noun."
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"Don't dare kiss an ugly girl, she'll tell the world about it.","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns are people (girl). About human social behavior."
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"Don't taste every man's soup, you'll burn your mouth.","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (minding others' business). The soup is metaphor for other people's affairs."
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"Even a fish wouldn't get caught if he kept his mouth shut.","FALSE","NONE","Meaning depends on wordplay (mouth=talking). About human behavior (keeping quiet). Swapping fish breaks the pun."
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"Every donkey thinks itself worthy of standing with the king's horses.","FALSE","NONE","About human pride/arrogance. King is a social role. The animals represent social hierarchy."
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"Every path has a puddle.","FALSE","NONE","Only two nouns but meaning is about life's difficulties. Metaphorical, not about physical path-puddle relationship."
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"Early ripe, early rotten.","TRUE","causal_chain","Quick ripening leads to quick rotting. Swappable: early bloom, early wilt. A=ripeness, B=rottenness. Physical process chain."
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"Every field looks green from a distance, even a cemetery.","FALSE","NONE","Meaning is about human perception and illusion (grass-is-greener). Cemetery adds dark humor that breaks on swap."
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"Everybody lays his load on the willing horse.","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (exploiting willing people). Horse represents a person. Primary subject is people."
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"Fools use bets for arguments.","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is people/role (fools). About human behavior."
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"He who holds the ladder is as bad as the thief.","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns are people/roles (thief, accomplice). About morality and complicity."
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"If you come to the end of your rope -- tie a knot in it and hang on.","FALSE","NONE","Rope is metaphor for endurance/patience. About human perseverance, not rope mechanics."
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"If you are always dwelling in trouble, change your address.","FALSE","NONE","Wordplay on dwelling/address. About human behavior and attitude."
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"If wishes were horses, then beggars would ride.","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns include people/roles (beggars). About abstract concept (wishing). Depends on specific wish-horse wordplay."
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"""IF's"" and ""But's"" butter no bread.","FALSE","NONE","Depends on wordplay (ifs and buts as abstract concepts). Only one concrete noun (bread)."
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"It takes a good many shovelfuls to bury the truth.","FALSE","NONE","Core meaning is about abstract concept (truth). Shovelfuls are metaphorical."
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"It is better to have a hen tomorrow than an egg today.","TRUE","proportional_mismatch","Compares small-now vs big-later using concrete nouns. Swappable: better a tree tomorrow than a seed today. A=hen (big), B=egg (small). Time/value mismatch."
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"Living is like licking honey off a thorn.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (living/life). The honey-thorn image is metaphor for life's bittersweet nature."
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"Listen at the keyhole and you'll hear news of yourself.","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (eavesdropping). Primary subject is a person."
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"Lend your money and lose your friend.","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns are people/roles (friend) and abstract (money). About social relationships."
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"Man is the only animal that can be skinned more than once.","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person (man). About human gullibility."
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"Must is a hard nut to crack.","FALSE","NONE","Depends on wordplay: 'must' (obligation) as a nut. Breaks on noun swap."
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"No matter how high a bird flies, it has to come down for water.","FALSE","NONE","About human pride/ambition. Bird represents a person. Meaning is about humility."
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"Nothing dries faster than a tear.","FALSE","NONE","Only one concrete noun (tear). About human emotions and their transience."
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"Nothing is gained by having one donkey call another ""Long Ears!""","FALSE","NONE","About human hypocrisy (pot calling kettle). Animals represent people."
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"Never stop the plough to catch a mouse.","TRUE","proportional_mismatch","Big important task (ploughing) vs tiny distraction (mouse). Swappable: never halt the ship to chase a gull. A=plough (big task), B=mouse (small distraction)."
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"No piper ever suited all ears.","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person/role (piper). About inability to please everyone."
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"One who thinks he can live without others is mistaken but he who thinks others cannot live without him are more mistaken.","FALSE","NONE","Entirely about people and social relationships. No concrete nouns."
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"One eyewitness is better than ten hearsays.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concepts (testimony, evidence). Primary noun is a person/role (eyewitness)."
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"One does not put beauty in a kettle.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (beauty). Only one concrete noun (kettle)."
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"Promises won't butter any bread.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (promises). Only one concrete noun (bread). About human unreliability."
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"Pleasant hours fly fast.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concepts (time, pleasure). No concrete nouns."
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"Sickness comes in haste and goes at leisure.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (sickness). No concrete swappable nouns."
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"Swallows and sparrows cannot understand the ambitions of swans.","FALSE","NONE","Animals represent social classes of people. About human ambition and hierarchy."
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"The sun doesn't shine on the same dog's back every day.","FALSE","NONE","About fortune/luck changing. Dog represents a person. Metaphorical."
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"The best patch is of the same cloth.","TRUE","material_transformation","Repair material should match original material. Swappable: the best weld is of the same metal. A=patch, B=cloth. About matching materials."
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"The stable wears out a horse more than a road.","FALSE","NONE","About inactivity being worse than activity. Horse represents a person. Metaphorical lesson about human laziness."
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"When the well is dry, you know the worth of water.","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Absence reveals value. Swappable: when the pantry is bare, you know the worth of bread. A=well (container), B=water (resource)."
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"When one has seen the bear in the woods, he hears his growl in every bush.","FALSE","NONE","About human psychology (fear, paranoia). The person is the primary subject."
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"Weeds need no sowing.","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Unwanted things propagate without effort. Swappable: rust needs no invitation. States an obvious property of weeds as wisdom. A=weeds, B=sowing."
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"You can't anymore give away something you ain't got than you can come back from someplace you haven't been.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (possession, presence). No concrete swappable nouns. Philosophical truism."
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"You never know the length of a snake until it is dead.","FALSE","NONE","About judging things (people) only in hindsight. Snake metaphorically represents a threat/person. Meaning is about human judgment."
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"You can't tell the depth of the well by the length of the handle on the pump.","TRUE","uncategorized","Surface measurement doesn't reveal hidden depth. Swappable: can't tell the weight of a chest by the size of its lock. Concrete nouns: well, handle, pump."
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"You can't put out old heads on young shoulders.","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns are people/body parts (heads, shoulders). About human wisdom and youth."
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"Do a little well and you do much.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (quality vs quantity of effort). No concrete nouns."
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"A bad broom leaves a dirty room.","TRUE","causal_chain","Defective tool leads to poor result. Swappable: a dull axe leaves a ragged log. A=bad broom, B=dirty room. Concrete cause-effect."
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"They must hunger in frost who will not work in heat.","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (work ethic). Primary subject is people. About consequences of laziness."
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"A cracked plate will last as long as a sound one.","TRUE","uncategorized","Imperfect object still functions. Swappable: a dented bucket holds as much as a new one. Concrete nouns: plate. About physical durability."
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"Water run by will does not turn a mill.","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Resource past the mechanism can't power it. Swappable: steam vented out does not drive a piston. A=water, B=mill. Physical cause-effect."
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"Every pea helps to fill the pod.","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Small contributions add up to fill the container. Swappable: every brick helps to build the wall. A=pea, B=pod."
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"One watch set right will do to set many by.","TRUE","uncategorized","One correct reference calibrates others. Swappable: one true plumb line will straighten many walls. Concrete nouns: watch."
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"Children and fools tell the truth.","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns are people/roles (children, fools). About human behavior."
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"Little children step on one's lap; tall ones tread on one's heart.","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns are people (children). About parenting and emotional pain."
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"He who rides slowly gets just as far, only it akes a little longer.","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (patience). Primary subject is a person."
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"Bad breath is better than no breath at all.","FALSE","NONE","Wordplay on breath (breathing vs bad breath). About being alive. Depends on pun."
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"Too many square meals make too many round people.","FALSE","NONE","Wordplay on square (meals) and round (people/overweight). Depends on pun. About human behavior."
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"When you feel all steamed up, remember the tea kettle -- it is always up to its neck in hot water and it still sings.","FALSE","NONE","Wordplay on steamed up and hot water. About human emotions (anger). Metaphorical."
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"You can't make cookies when you haven't got the dough.","FALSE","NONE","Wordplay on dough (money vs baking ingredient). Meaning depends on pun."
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"A bad penny always turns up","FALSE","NONE","Penny represents an unwanted person. About human social dynamics. Metaphorical."
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"A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush","TRUE","proportional_mismatch","Certain small possession vs uncertain larger quantity. Swappable: a fish on the hook is worth five in the stream. A=bird in hand, B=two in bush."
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"A dog is a man's best friend","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person (man). About human-animal social bond. Not swappable structurally."
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"A mill cannot grind with the water that is past","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Missed resource can't power the mechanism. Swappable: an oven can't bake with the heat already gone. A=mill, B=water. Same as #66 variant."
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"A miss is as good as a mile","FALSE","NONE","Wordplay on miss/mile. About abstract concept (near-misses). Depends on pun."
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"A rolling stone gathers no moss","TRUE","uncategorized","Moving object doesn't accumulate surface growth. Swappable: a spinning wheel collects no dust. A=stone, B=moss."
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"A watched man never plays","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person (man). About human behavior under surveillance."
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"A watched pot/kettle never boils","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Observation seems to delay the process. Swappable: a watched oven never heats. A=pot/kettle, B=boiling. Concrete object-process relationship."
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"All hands on deck/to the pump","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns are people (hands=crew). About human collective effort."
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"All is grist that comes to the mill","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Everything entering the mechanism gets processed. Swappable: all is fuel that enters the furnace. A=grist, B=mill."
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"An apple a day keeps the doctor away","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun includes a person/role (doctor). About health advice. Culturally specific to apple."
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"An army marches on its stomach","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is people/collective (army). About human logistics and morale."
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"Any port in a storm","FALSE","NONE","Port/storm are metaphors for refuge/crisis. About human desperation and lowered standards."
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"As you sow so shall you reap","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (actions and consequences). The sowing/reaping is metaphorical for moral behavior."
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"Barking dogs seldom bite","FALSE","NONE","Dogs represent threatening people. About human behavior (bluster vs action)."
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"Before setting out on a mission of vengeance, dig two graves","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (revenge). Primary subject is a person. Abstract moral teaching."
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"Beggars cannot be choosers","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person/role (beggars). About human social position."
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"Big fish eat little fish","FALSE","NONE","Fish represent people in power dynamics. About human hierarchy and exploitation."
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"Birds of a feather (flock together)","FALSE","NONE","Birds represent people. About human social grouping by similarity."
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"Buy cheap, buy twice","FALSE","NONE","No concrete swappable nouns. About abstract purchasing behavior."
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"Calm seas never made a good sailor","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person/role (sailor). About human character development through adversity."
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"Coffee and love taste best when hot (Ethiopian proverb)","FALSE","NONE","Mixes concrete (coffee) with abstract (love). About human emotion. Not freely swappable."
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"Cold hands, warm heart","FALSE","NONE","About human body/character. Primary nouns are body parts. About personality."
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"Criss-cross, applesauce","FALSE","NONE","Children's rhyme, not a wisdom proverb. No meaningful structure to classify."
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"Cross the stream where it is shallowest","TRUE","uncategorized","Take the easiest path through an obstacle. Swappable: climb the wall where it is lowest. A=stream, property=shallowest. Concrete spatial relationship."
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"Cut your coat according to your cloth","TRUE","material_transformation","Output must match available input material. Swappable: shape your pot according to your clay. A=coat, B=cloth. Material constraint."
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"Do not carry coals to Newcastle","FALSE","NONE","Meaning depends on specific cultural knowledge (Newcastle = coal town). Breaks on noun swap without the cultural reference."
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"Do not keep a dog and bark yourself","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (delegation). Dog represents a subordinate/servant. About social roles."
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"Do not make a mountain out of a mole hill","TRUE","proportional_mismatch","Inflating small thing (molehill) to large thing (mountain). Swappable: don't make an ocean out of a puddle. A=mountain, B=molehill."
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"Do not put the cart before the horse","TRUE","uncategorized","Sequence/order matters for physical function. Swappable: don't put the roof before the walls. A=cart, B=horse. Concrete ordering relationship."
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"Do not put too many irons in the fire","TRUE","proportional_mismatch","Too many items overwhelm the resource. Swappable: don't put too many pots on the stove. A=irons, B=fire. Concrete capacity limit."
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"Do not put new wine into old bottles","TRUE","material_transformation","New content incompatible with old container. Swappable: don't pour hot soup into a cold jar. A=new wine, B=old bottles. Material mismatch."
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"Do not teach your Grandmother to suck eggs","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person/role (Grandmother). About human presumption and social roles."
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"Do not throw the baby out with the bathwater","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person (baby). About discarding the valuable with the worthless. Baby is not a swappable object."
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"Don't take any wooden nickels","FALSE","NONE","About human gullibility/deception. The wooden nickels are metaphor for scams."
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"East is east, and west is west (and never the twain shall meet)","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concepts (cultural differences). Directions are not concrete swappable nouns in meaningful way."
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"Even a worm will turn","FALSE","NONE","Worm represents a downtrodden person. About human behavior (fighting back when pushed too far)."
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"Every dog has his day","FALSE","NONE","Dog represents a person. About human fortune and fairness. Abstract."
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"Every stick has two ends","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Every tool/situation has two aspects. Swappable: every blade has two edges. A=stick, B=two ends. States obvious physical property as wisdom."
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"Feed a cold, starve a fever","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concepts (illness). Medical folk advice. Cold and fever aren't concrete swappable nouns."
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"Fight fire with fire","FALSE","NONE","Only one concrete noun repeated (fire). About strategy/approach. Metaphorical."
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"Fine words butter no parsnips","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (words/promises). Similar to #48. Only one concrete noun (parsnips)."
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"First come, first served","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (queuing/priority). No concrete nouns."
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"Fish and guests smell after three days","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun includes people (guests). About human social behavior (overstaying welcome)."
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"For want of a nail the shoe was lost; for want of a shoe the horse was lost; and for want of a horse the man was lost","TRUE","causal_chain","Classic cascading loss. Small item (nail) -> shoe -> horse -> man. Swappable: for want of a rivet the plate was lost. A=nail, B=shoe, C=horse, D=man."
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"Forewarned is forearmed","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concepts (knowledge, preparation). No concrete nouns. Wordplay on fore-."
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"Give a dog a bad name and hang him","FALSE","NONE","Dog represents a person. About human reputation and social judgment."
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"Give a man rope enough and he will hang himself","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person (man). About human self-destruction."
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"Good fences make good neighbours","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun includes people (neighbours). About human social boundaries."
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"Half a loaf is better than no bread","TRUE","proportional_mismatch","Partial resource better than none. Swappable: half a bucket is better than no water. A=half loaf, B=no bread."
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"He that goes a-borrowing, goes a-sorrowing","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person (he). About human behavior (debt)."
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"Horses for courses","FALSE","NONE","About matching suitability. Depends on wordplay (horses/courses rhyme). Breaks on swap."
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"If ifs and ands were pots and pans, there would be no work for tinkers","FALSE","NONE","Depends on wordplay (ifs and ands/pots and pans). Primary noun includes person/role (tinkers)."
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"If ifs and buts were candies and nuts, we'd all have a merry Christmas[13]","FALSE","NONE","Depends on wordplay. About abstract concepts (excuses). Cultural reference (Christmas)."
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"If it ain't broke, don't fix it","FALSE","NONE","No specific concrete nouns (uses generic 'it'). About abstract concept of leaving well enough alone."
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"If it were a snake, it would have bit you","FALSE","NONE","About human inattention. Snake is metaphor for something obvious. About behavior."
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"If the shoe fits, wear it","FALSE","NONE","Shoe is metaphor for criticism/description. About accepting truth about oneself. Meaning breaks on noun swap."
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"If wishes were horses, beggars would ride","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun includes people/roles (beggars). About abstract concept (wishing). Duplicate of #31."
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"If you can't run with the horses, get off the track","FALSE","NONE","Horses represent competitors/people. About human ability and knowing your limits."
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"If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen","FALSE","NONE","Kitchen/heat are metaphors for workplace pressure. About human resilience. Meaning is social, not physical."
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"If you give a mouse a cookie, he'll always ask for a glass of milk","FALSE","NONE","Mouse represents a person (from children's book). About human behavior (escalating demands). Anthropomorphized animal."
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"If you lie down with dogs, you will get up with fleas[a] (James Sandford, The Garden of Pleasure)","TRUE","conditional_animal_wisdom","Association with X gives you X's problems. Swappable: if you sleep in the barn, you'll wake with hay. A=dogs, B=fleas. Animal behavior encodes consequence."
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"If you pay peanuts, you get monkeys","FALSE","NONE","Peanuts/monkeys represent wages/workers. About human employment and compensation. Metaphorical."
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"If you play with fire, you will get burned","FALSE","NONE","Only one concrete noun (fire). About human recklessness. Too metaphorical to swap meaningfully."
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"In for a penny, in for a pound","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (commitment escalation). Penny/pound represent stakes. Metaphorical."
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"(March comes) in like a lion, (and goes) out like a lamb","FALSE","NONE","About weather/seasons. Animals are simile vehicles, not structural nouns. Culturally specific to March."
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"It ain't over till the fat lady sings","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person (fat lady). Cultural reference (opera). About human patience."
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"It is no use crying over spilt milk","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Can't undo a spillage. Swappable: no use sweeping up shattered glass. A=spilt milk. Irreversible physical event."
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"It is the early bird that gets the worm","TRUE","conditional_animal_wisdom","First arrival gets the resource. Swappable: the early cat catches the mouse. A=early bird, B=worm. Animal behavior encodes timing lesson."
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"It is the squeaky wheel that gets the grease","TRUE","uncategorized","Malfunctioning part draws maintenance attention. Swappable: the leaky pipe gets the patch. A=squeaky wheel, B=grease."
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"It never rains but it pours","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (misfortune clustering). Rain is metaphorical. Only one type of noun."
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"It takes a thief to catch a thief","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is a person/role (thief). About human knowledge/expertise."
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"Islands depend on reeds, just as reeds depend on islands (Myanmar proverbs)[citation needed]","TRUE","uncategorized","Mutual dependency between two physical things. Swappable: walls depend on mortar, just as mortar depends on walls. A=islands, B=reeds."
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"Keep your powder dry (Valentine Blacker, 1834 from Oliver's Advice)[16]","FALSE","NONE","Only one concrete noun (powder). About human preparedness. Military metaphor."
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"Kill two birds with one stone.","TRUE","proportional_mismatch","One resource accomplishes multiple tasks. Swappable: catch two fish with one net. A=two birds, B=one stone. Efficiency through concrete objects."
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"The last drop makes the cup run over","TRUE","causal_chain","Final small addition causes overflow. Swappable: the last straw breaks the beam. A=last drop, B=cup overflow."
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"Laugh before breakfast, cry before supper","FALSE","NONE","About human emotion and superstition. No concrete swappable nouns (laugh/cry are actions about people)."
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"Learn a language, and you will avoid a war (Arab proverb)","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concepts (language, war, communication). About human behavior."
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"Let sleeping dogs lie","FALSE","NONE","Dogs represent dormant problems/people. About human caution and social dynamics."
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"Let well alone","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept. No concrete nouns at all."
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"Little pitchers have big ears","FALSE","NONE","Wordplay: pitchers have 'ears' (handles) = children eavesdrop. Depends on pun."
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"Little strokes fell great oaks","TRUE","causal_chain","Many small actions achieve a big result. Swappable: small drops fill great barrels. A=little strokes, B=great oaks."
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"Make hay while the sun shines","TRUE","uncategorized","Process resource while conditions allow. Swappable: dry the salt while the wind blows. A=hay, B=sun. Concrete time-dependent process."
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"Many a mickle makes a muckle","FALSE","NONE","Depends on wordplay (mickle/muckle are archaic words). About abstract accumulation."
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"March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb","FALSE","NONE","Duplicate of #141. About weather/seasons. Animals are simile vehicles."
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"Milking the bull","TRUE","futile_preparation","Attempting to extract product from wrong source. Swappable: shearing the pig. A=milking, B=bull. Wrong-source futility with concrete nouns."
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"Money demands care, you abuse it and it disappears – Rashida Costa","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (money management). About human behavior."
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"Never cast a clout until May be out","FALSE","NONE","Culturally specific (May=month or hawthorn). About human clothing choices. Breaks on swap."
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"Never look a gift horse in the mouth","FALSE","NONE","Meaning depends on specific horse-inspection practice (teeth = age). About human ingratitude. Culturally specific."
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"No friends but the mountains[24]","FALSE","NONE","About human isolation and social relationships (Kurdish proverb). Friends are people."
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"Oil and water do not mix","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Two incompatible substances won't combine. Swappable: sand and mercury do not blend. A=oil, B=water. Physical property stated as wisdom."
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"One hand washes the other","FALSE","NONE","Hands represent people. About human reciprocity and cooperation."
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"One kind word can warm three winter months","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (kindness). Primary subject is human speech/emotion."
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"One man's meat is another man's poison","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns include people (man). About human subjective preference."
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"One might as well be hanged for a sheep as a lamb","FALSE","NONE","About human punishment/justice. Person is implied primary subject. Sheep/lamb represent the crime's magnitude."
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"One swallow does not make a summer","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Single instance doesn't establish a pattern. Swappable: one raindrop does not make a flood. A=swallow, B=summer. Concrete sign vs full phenomenon."
|
||
"One year's seeding makes seven years weeding","TRUE","causal_chain","Small initial neglect creates prolonged cleanup. Swappable: one season's rust makes seven seasons' sanding. A=seeding, B=weeding. Concrete agricultural cause-effect."
|
||
"Out of the frying pan and into the fire","TRUE","uncategorized","Escape from one danger into a worse one. Swappable: out of the puddle and into the lake. A=frying pan, B=fire. Concrete escalation of same type."
|
||
"Penny wise and pound foolish","TRUE","proportional_mismatch","Careful with small amount, wasteful with large. Swappable: thimble-wise and barrel-foolish. A=penny (small), B=pound (large)."
|
||
"Penny, Penny. Makes many.","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (accumulation of money). Only one concrete noun. Too vague."
|
||
"Putting the cart before the horse","TRUE","uncategorized","Sequence/order matters for physical function. Swappable: putting the roof before the walls. A=cart, B=horse. Duplicate of #105."
|
||
"Red sky at night shepherd's delight; red sky in the morning, shepherd's warning","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun includes person/role (shepherd). Weather prediction based on culturally specific observation. Breaks on swap."
|
||
"Risk it for a biscuit.[27]","FALSE","NONE","Depends on wordplay/rhyme (risk/biscuit). About human behavior (risk-taking). Only one concrete noun."
|
||
"See a pin and pick it up, all the day you will have good luck; See a pin and let it lay, bad luck you will have all day","FALSE","NONE","About superstition. Only one concrete noun (pin). About human behavior and luck."
|
||
"Set a thief to catch a thief","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun is person/role (thief). Duplicate concept of #147. About human expertise."
|
||
"Softly, softly, catchee monkey","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (patience, strategy). Monkey represents a goal/person. Colonial-era idiom."
|
||
"Speak as you find","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (honesty). No concrete nouns."
|
||
"Speak of the devil and he shall/is sure/will appear","FALSE","NONE","About abstract/supernatural concept. About human social coincidence."
|
||
"Strike while the iron is hot","TRUE","uncategorized","Act on material while conditions allow. Swappable: pour while the wax is soft. A=iron, condition=hot. Concrete time-dependent action. Similar to #158."
|
||
"(A) swarm in May is worth a load of hay; a swarm in June is worth a silver spoon; but a swarm in July is not worth a fly","FALSE","NONE","Depends on specific month-value associations and rhyme scheme. Culturally specific beekeeping knowledge. Breaks on swap."
|
||
"Take care of the pennies, and the pounds will take care of themselves","TRUE","causal_chain","Attention to small units accumulates to large result. Swappable: mind the drops and the barrels fill themselves. A=pennies, B=pounds."
|
||
"The apple does not fall/never falls far from the tree","FALSE","NONE","About human heredity/behavior (children resemble parents). Apple/tree represent parent-child. About people."
|
||
"The best-laid schemes of mice and men often go awry","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun includes people (men). About human planning and failure. Literary reference (Burns)."
|
||
"The bread never falls but on its buttered side","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Things go wrong in the worst way. Swappable: the toast always lands jam-side down. A=bread, B=buttered side. Physical (Murphy's law with concrete nouns)."
|
||
"The cobbler always wears the worst shoes","TRUE","ironic_deficiency","Producer of X lacks X. Swappable: the baker's family eats stale bread. A=cobbler, X=shoes. Classic ironic deficiency."
|
||
"The early bird catches the worm","TRUE","conditional_animal_wisdom","First arrival gets the resource. Swappable: the early cat catches the mouse. A=early bird, B=worm. Duplicate of #144."
|
||
"It is the last straw that breaks the camel's back","TRUE","causal_chain","Final small addition causes collapse. Swappable: the last grain tips the scale. A=last straw, B=camel's back."
|
||
"The left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing","FALSE","NONE","Hands represent people/departments. About human organizational dysfunction."
|
||
"The Moon is made of green cheese","FALSE","NONE","Deliberate absurdity/irony. About human gullibility. Not a wisdom structure."
|
||
"The more the merrier","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept. No concrete nouns. About human social preference."
|
||
"The nail that sticks out gets hammered down","FALSE","NONE","Nail represents a nonconformist person. About human social conformity pressure (Japanese cultural proverb)."
|
||
"The old wooden spoon beats me down","FALSE","NONE","Primary subject is a person (me). About human experience/punishment."
|
||
"The shoemaker's son always goes barefoot","TRUE","ironic_deficiency","Producer of X's family lacks X. Swappable: the brewer's household drinks water. A=shoemaker, X=shoes. Classic ironic deficiency."
|
||
"The squeaky wheel gets the grease","TRUE","uncategorized","Malfunctioning part gets maintenance attention. Swappable: the leaky pipe gets the solder. A=squeaky wheel, B=grease. Duplicate of #145."
|
||
"The squeaky wheel gets the oil","TRUE","uncategorized","Malfunctioning part gets maintenance. Variant of #145/#199. Swappable: the rusty hinge gets the lubricant. A=squeaky wheel, B=oil."
|
||
"The streets are paved with gold","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept (opportunity, wealth). Metaphorical. Not about physical streets."
|
||
"The stupid monkey knows not to eat the banana skin","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (common sense). Monkey represents a person. 'Even a fool knows X.'"
|
||
"There are more ways of killing a cat than choking it with cream","FALSE","NONE","About human problem-solving (multiple approaches). Cat represents the problem. Violent metaphor."
|
||
"There are always more fish in the sea","FALSE","NONE","Fish represent people (romantic partners). About human relationships and moving on."
|
||
"There is many a good tune played on an old fiddle","FALSE","NONE","Fiddle represents an older person. About human capability despite age. Metaphorical."
|
||
"Too many cooks spoil the broth","FALSE","NONE","Primary nouns include people/roles (cooks). About human coordination failure and too many people involved."
|
||
"Too much rain makes a flood","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Excess of input creates overflow. Swappable: too much heat makes a fire. A=rain, B=flood. Physical cause-effect."
|
||
"Two birds with one stone","TRUE","proportional_mismatch","One resource accomplishes multiple goals. Shortened duplicate of #150. Swappable: two fish with one net. A=two birds, B=one stone."
|
||
"Use it or lose it","FALSE","NONE","About abstract concept. No concrete nouns. About human behavior."
|
||
"United we bargain; divided we beg","FALSE","NONE","About human collective behavior (labor/politics). No concrete nouns."
|
||
"Walk softly but carry a big stick (26th U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt, 1900 in letter relating an old African proverb)[36]","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (diplomacy, power). Stick is metaphor for military/political power."
|
||
"Walnuts and pears you plant for your heirs","FALSE","NONE","Primary noun includes people (heirs). About human generational planning. Depends on specific slow-growing trees."
|
||
"What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander","FALSE","NONE","Goose/gander represent people (often gendered). About human fairness and equal treatment."
|
||
"What the eye does not see (the heart does not grieve over)","FALSE","NONE","About human psychology. Eye/heart are body parts representing perception/emotion."
|
||
"When it rains it pours","FALSE","NONE","Duplicate of #146. About abstract concept (misfortune clustering)."
|
||
"When the cat is away, the mice will play","FALSE","NONE","Cat/mice represent authority figure and subordinates. About human behavior when unsupervised."
|
||
"Who will bell the cat?","FALSE","NONE","About human courage and collective action. Cat represents danger. People are the implied subject."
|
||
"Why keep a dog and bark yourself?","FALSE","NONE","Duplicate concept of #103. About human delegation. Dog represents subordinate."
|
||
"You can lead a horse to water, but you cannot make it drink","FALSE","NONE","Horse represents a person. About human stubbornness and free will."
|
||
"You cannot burn a candle at both ends.","FALSE","NONE","Candle represents human energy/time. About overwork and exhaustion. Metaphorical."
|
||
"You cannot make a silk purse from a sow's ear","TRUE","material_transformation","Can't make quality output from poor input. Swappable: can't make a gold ring from a lead slug. A=silk purse, B=sow's ear."
|
||
"You cannot make bricks without straw","TRUE","material_transformation","Can't produce output without essential input material. Swappable: can't bake bread without flour. A=bricks, B=straw."
|
||
"You cannot run with the hare and hunt with the hounds","FALSE","NONE","Hare/hounds represent opposing human factions. About human loyalty and picking sides."
|
||
"(You cannot) teach an old dog new tricks","FALSE","NONE","Dog represents a person. About human adaptability and age. Metaphorical."
|
||
"You cannot unscramble eggs","TRUE","tautological_wisdom","Irreversible transformation can't be undone. Swappable: you cannot unbake bread. A=eggs, B=scrambling. States irreversibility as wisdom."
|
||
"You catch more flies with honey than with vinegar","FALSE","NONE","Flies represent people. Honey/vinegar represent kind vs harsh approaches. About human persuasion."
|
||
"You pay your dime and you takes your chances","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (gambling, risk). Only one concrete noun (dime). About accepting consequences."
|
||
"You scratch my back and I will scratch yours","FALSE","NONE","About human reciprocity. Primary subjects are people. Back-scratching is metaphor for favors."
|
||
"You've got to separate the wheat from the chaff","TRUE","material_transformation","Must sort valuable from worthless material. Swappable: sift the gold from the sand. A=wheat, B=chaff."
|
||
"You've made your bed and you must lie in/on it","FALSE","NONE","About human behavior (accepting consequences). Bed-making is metaphor for choices. About personal responsibility."
|