English to Urdu Proverbs
Urdu to English Proverbs
English Proverb
POVERTY IS AN EVIL COUNSELLOR
Urdu Proverb
مفلسی بری صلاح کار ہے
Proverb in Roman Urdu
Muflisi Buri Salah Car Hai
POVERTY IS AN EVIL COUNSELLOR
مفلسی بری صلاح کار ہے
Muflisi Buri Salah Car Hai
TELL A LIE AND FIND THE TRUTH
جھوٹ کے زبان سے نکلنے کی دیر ہے کہ تم کو جھٹلانے والے سینکڑوں کھڑے ہو جائیں گے
Jhoot Ke Zabaan Se Niklny Ki Der Hai Ke Tum Ko Jhutlanay Walay Senkron Kharray Ho Jayen Ge
A HUNGRY MAN SMELLS MEAT FROM A DISTANCE
بُھوکے کو دُور سے خُوشبو آتی ہے
Bhukay Ko Door Se Khushbu Aati Hai
PRACTISE WHAT YOU PREACH
جو نصیحت کرو خود بھی اس پر عمل کرو !
Jo Naseehat Karo Khud Bhi Is Par Amal Karo !
A BLOOD IS ALIKE ANCIENT
خون سب کا برابر !
Khoon Sab Ka Barabar !
English Idioms About “General”
Idiom: All the more
Meaning: Even more.
Example: Her family didn’t want her to get married to her new boyfriend, but that just made her all the more determined.
English Idioms About “Law”
Idiom: Law of the jungle
Meaning: This expression means survival of the strongest or the fittest. The origin of the phrase can be traced back to “The Jungle Book” by Rudyard Kipling. He uses the term to describe an actual set of legal codes used by wolves and other animals in the jungles of India.
Example: Some economists think that capitalism is governed by the law of the jungle.
NO WORSE THIEF THAN A BAD BOOK
بُری کتاب سے بڑھ کر وقت ضائع کرنے والی کوئی چیز نہیں
Burii Kitaab Se Barh Kar Waqt Zaya Karne Wali Koi Cheez Nahi
English Idioms About “Money”
Idiom: Rags to riches
Meaning: The phrase rags-to-riches refers to any situation in which a person rises from poverty to wealth.
Example: He was homeless and went on to create the largest and most successful service company in the country. It’s really a rags-to-riches story.
RAID THE MARKET
مستقبل کے منافع کیلئے قیمت بڑھانا
Mustaqbil Ke Munafe Ke Liye Qeemat Barhana