| Icontinued |
| Saying - Author |
| If youth knew, if age could. - Henri Estienne (1531-1598) |
| If wishes were horses, then beggars would ride. - unknown |
| Ignorance is a voluntary misfortune. - unknown |
| Ignorance is bliss. - Thomas Gray (1716-1771) |
| Ignorance is the seed of intimidation. - D. Hiser |
| Ill gotten goods never thrive. - Cicero (106-43 BC) |
| Ill weeds grow fast. - John Heywood (c.1497-1580) |
| Imagination is more important than knowledge. - Albert Einstein |
| Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. - Charles Caleb Colton (c.1780-1832) |
| Implementation beats oration. - Aesop (c.620-560 BC) |
| In a crisis, give help first and then advice. - Aesop (c.620-560 BC) |
| In bad luck, hold out; in good luck, hold in.- German (on luck) |
| In bad things be slow; in good things be fast. - Afghan (on time and timeliness) |
| In for a penny, in for a pound. - E. Ravenscroft (1695) |
| In night there is counsel. - Greek (on advice) |
| In the country of the blind, the one-eyed man is king. - Desiderius Erasmus (1465-1536) |
| In time we hate that which we often fear. - Seneca (8 BC-AD 65) |
| Industry pays debts, despair encreases them. - Ben Franklin (1706-1790) |
| Industry, perseverance & frugality make fortune yield. - Ben Franklin (1706-1790) |
| Instead of seeking new landscapes, develop new eyes. - Marcel Proust (1871-1922) |
| Instruction in youth is like engraving in stone. - Moroccan (on education) |
| Interest on debt grows without rain.- Yiddish (on indebtedness) |
| Into every life a little rain must fall. - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882) "into each life some rain must fall." |
| It ain't over til it's over. - Yogi Berra |
| It is a fool's sheep that breaks loose twice. - Ashanti (West African) (on foolishness) |
| It is a foolish sheep that makes the wolf its confessor. - Italian (on common sense) |
| It is a long lane that has no turns.James Ray (1670) |
| It is as cheap sitting as it is standing. - Italian Proverb |
| It is better to be born a beggar than a fool. - Spanish Proverb |
| It is better to be the head of a chicken than the rear of an ox. - Japanese (on relative worth) |
| It is better to enjoy the cool breeze of others waving your flag, than to suffer the sweat of doing it yourself. - L.D. Seese (1992) thanks to J. Martin |
| It is better to give than to receive. - Jesus |
| It is better to light one candle than to curse the darkness. - Chinese Proverb |
| It is better to prevent than to cure. - Peruvian (on common sense) |
| It is better to return a borrowed pot with a little something you last cooked in it. - Omaha (Native American) (on the conduct of life) |
| It is better to suffer for truth than to prosper by falsehood. - Danish (on comparable worth) |
| It is better to take many injuries than to give one. - Ben Franklin (1706-1790) |
| It is better to wear out one's shoes than one's sheets. - Genovese (Italian)(on work) |
| It is easier to believe than to go and ask.- Serbian (on idleness) |
| It is easier to criticize than to do better. - Swiss (on criticism) |
| It is easier to dam a river than to stop gossip. - Moro (Filipino) (on gossip) |
| It is easy to advise the wise. - Serbian (on advice) |
| It is easy to be brave from a distance. - Aesop (c.620-560 BC) |
| It is easy to despise what you cannot get. - Aesop (c.620-560 BC) |
| It is easy to kick a person when he is down. - Aesop (c.620-560 BC) |
| It is far easier to start something than to finish it. - unknown |
| It is foolish to try to imitate the skills of others. - Aesop (c.620-560 BC) |
| It is hard for an ex-king to become a nightwatchman. - Kashmiri (on habit) |
| It is not fair to ask of others what you are not willing to do yourself. - Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962) |
| It is often easier to fight for your principles than to live up to them. - Adlai Stevenson |
| It is possible to have too much of a good thing. - Aesop (c.620-560 BC) |
| It is said that you can't take it with you; I say there are two things you can take with you: the things you do for others and the things you do to others - (harold h. cornett, jr.) |
| It is the last straw that breaks the camel's back. - Charles Dickens (1812-1870) |
| It is useless attacking the insensible. - Aesop (c.620-560 BC) |
| It is wise not to seek a secret and honest not to reveal it. - Ben Franklin (1706-1790) |
| It never rains but it pours. - unknown |
| It pays to be content with your lot. - Aesop (c.620-560 BC) |
| It pays to be nice. - unknown |
| It pays to be prepared. - Aesop (c.620-560 BC) |
| It takes a heap of licks to hit a nail in the dark. - African American (on common sense) |
| It takes a village to raise a child. - unknown |
| It takes all kinds to make a world go round. - T. Shelton |
| It takes as much energy to wish as it does to plan. - Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962) |
| It takes one to know one. - unknown |
| It takes two to tangle. - unknown |
| It's a small world. - unknown |
| It's all in how you look at things. - unknown |
| It's an ill bird that fouls his own nest. - Latin Proverb |
| It's an ill wind that blows no good. - John Heywood (c.1497-1580) |
| It's better to be thought a fool, than to open your mouth and remove all doubt. - Bible |
| It's better to find a whole worm in your apple than half a worm. - unknown |
| It's but little good you'll do a-watering the last year's crop. - George Eliot (1819-1880) |
| It's never too late. - unknown |
| It's no use closing the barn door after the horse is gone. - John Heywood (c.1497-1580) |
| It's not enough to know how to ride- one must also know how to fall. - Mexican (on success and failure) |
| It's not the end of the world. - unknown |
| It's not what you say; it's how you say it. - American mothers (thanks to J. Martin) |
| It's okay to make a mistake, as long as you learn from it. - unknown |
| It's six of one, half dozen of another. - unknown |
| It's the little things that count. - unknown |