Monthly

March.

Rooks fly to the nest by friendly spring.

How many thawed patches, so many larks.

Kulik has arrived - prepare the seeds.

Spring is a holiday for everyone.

Neither water in March, nor grass in April (Conditionally).

March water is healing (from March snow). She is from freckles and sunburn.

April.

April is the key to spring.

April will get everyone drunk.

April with water - May with grass.

In April, the raven bathes the children.

April sleeps and blows, promises warmth, and the man looks, something else will happen!

May.

In May, everything around will dress up - where with a leaf, where with a flower, and where with grass.

May is cold - a year of grain.

May frost will not squeeze out tears.

If a birch has pubescent forward - to a hot summer, maple - to a cold one.

The grass is small in May, but it feeds the cattle.

March is dry and wet May - there will be porridge and loaf.

If it rains in May, there will be rye.

May grass feeds the hungry.

A small bird is a nightingale, but May knows.

June.

June is the blush of the year.

In June, the day does not fade.

Warm June and the fish are happy.

End of flight, beginning of summer.

July.

July is not tired.

July is the month of berries.

In July, the water blooms.

August.

The month of August smells like an apple.

In August, summer is in the afternoon, and autumn is in the afternoon.

In August, the worker has three worries: to mow, to plow, and to sow.

Cranes went south - wait for winter.

August is hard labor, but after that there will be a mint.

In August, the sickles are warm, the water is cold.

September.

September is the evening of the year.

In September, the forest is thinner and the bird's voice is quieter.

September is never fruitless.

Honey mushrooms appeared - the end of summer.

September is cold and full.

Since September, fire in the field and in the hut.

October.

In October, neither on wheels nor on sledges.

October is the harvest of the last fruits.

October smells like cabbage.

October is cold, but full.

The first snow falls forty days before winter.

In October, autumn is before noon, and winter is after noon.

Mine and trample flax from mid-October.

November.

November is the gate of winter.

In November, winter and autumn fight.

November is the month of arrival of winter feathered guests.

November is not winter - a pre-winter season.

November is an all-terrain vehicle.

November nights are the darkest of the year.

July is the zenith of heat, the crown of summer.

July is not tired.

July is the month of berries.

In July, the water blooms.

Red evening - bright day.

Grasshoppers do not creak - hurry to remove the hay.

In July, the yard is empty, but the field is thick.

July - at least undress, and December - dress warmly.

It is not the ax that feeds the peasant, but the work of July.

December.

December is the winter hat.

December comforts the eyes with snow, but tears the ear with frost.

In December it dawns late, but it gets dark early.

In frost and forty pounds is not a thing.

Jelly. December ends the year, winter begins.

January.

January is the beginning of the year, winter is the middle.

In January, the sun for summer, winter for frost.

As the day grows, so does the cold.

In January, the snow will inflate - the bread will arrive.

January is the month of bright stars, white trails, blue ice.

February.

February is full of blizzards.

Blizzards and blizzards flew into February.

February is the month of winds and crooked roads.

February has two friends: a blizzard and a blizzard.

February - wide roads.

Bokogrey. February will let the water in, March will pick it up.

Seasonal changes in nature. Superstitions are omens.

When it rains, then it's cold.

In the spring the rain soars, in the autumn it wets.

Make hay while the sun is shining.

Lots of snow, lots of bread.

Kos, spit, until the dew, down with the dew and we are home.

Salt gets wet - to rain.

Tobacco becomes damp - to damp weather.

Abundant dew - to good weather.

Autumn frost - to dry and sunny weather.

Fog spreads over the water in the morning - to good weather.

Few stars in the sky - to bad weather.

The ring around the sun - to bad weather.

The sun sets red - to the wind.

In the young month, the fish bite.

A lot of crayfish - to a good catch of fish.

A leaf develops on an oak tree - a catch of pike (censored).

When the bird cherry blossoms, then the catch is for bream.

Plow deeper - chew more bread.

Put manure thickly - the barn will not be empty.

Who sows early, does not lose seeds.

Sow in the weather - more offspring.

The frogs cry: it's time to sow.

When mosquitoes appear, it's time to sow rye.

This rye into ashes, and wheat at the right time.

Sowing rye with a north wind will give birth stronger and larger.

Rye turns green for two weeks, ears for two weeks, fades for two weeks, pours for two weeks, dries up for two weeks.

Lots of water, lots of grass.

This wheat, when spring is red.

Rowan blossoms brightly - there will be a lot of oats.

Aspen in earrings - a crop for oats.

Barley is sown while viburnum blooms.

Juniper will bloom - it's time to sow barley.

The cuckoo cuckooed - it's time to sow flax.

In the first days of the new moon, this pea.

When planting cabbage, they say: “Don’t be ankle-sized, be pot-bellied; don’t be empty, but be thick; don’t be thick, but be delicious; don’t be old, be young; don’t be small, be great!”

Late leaf fall - for a difficult year.

Early swallows - for a happy year.

A lot of acorns on oak - for a warm winter and a fertile summer.

Ryasna raspberry - harvest for bread (tamb.).

Mold on rags - to the harvest of mushrooms.

Spring ice is sinking - for a heavy (breadless) harvest.

Dry March and wet May make good bread.

Large hoarfrost, mounds of snow, deeply frozen ground - to grain production.

When it is smooth in the field in winter, and it will be smooth in the barrel.

Cold winter- grace (foretells the harvest).

If the earth is not frozen, it will not give juice (after a warm winter, crop failure).

Elements - phenomena.

The storm is God's grace.

It knocks in the sky - it is heard on the earth.

If the first thunder from noon (from the south), then there will be a formidable summer.

Fire is a king, water is a queen, earth is a mother, heaven is a father, wind is a master, rain is a breadwinner, the sun is a prince, the moon is a princess.

Water and earth wears away and stone hollows.

Don't be friends with fire, with water, don't be friends with the wind, but be friends with the earth.

Don't mess with fire, don't be friends with water, don't trust the wind.

The star falls into the wind.

The first roosters (midnight), the second (before dawn), the third (dawn).

No light, no dawn (early).

You can't escape thunder and water.

Environmental proverbs.

/ Laws of Barry Comoner /

Everything is connected to everyone.

You have to pay for everything.

Everything has to go somewhere.

Nature knows best.

"The dead have no shame"

These words were spoken by Prince Svyatoslav on the eve of the battle of Dorostol, during the Russian-Byzantine war in 970.

"Here's to you, grandmother, and St. George's Day"

St. George's Day in Russia, 15th - 16th centuries. was the time (after the end of the autumn agricultural work) of the permitted transition of peasants from one landowner to another. It was canceled by the Decree "on reserved years" by Ivan the Terrible in 1581, which was another step towards the final enslavement of the peasants.

"Trust in God, but don't make a mistake yourself"

The proverb was born in the 17th century. among urban merchants and artisans. Life demanded from them worldly and professional skills, judgment and independent decisions.

"Disappeared like a Swede near Poltava"

The Battle of Poltava (June 27 (July 8), 1709) is a general battle between the Swedish armies during the Northern War (1700-1721), in which the Russians won a landslide victory.

“It is hard in learning, easy in battle!”, “Sweat saves blood.”

Orders of the great Russian commander A. V. Suvorov (1730-1800). Suvorov assigned an exceptionally large role vocational training soldiers and officers, taught them to act creatively in various combat conditions, with the least losses, and often repeated the above expressions.

"Kutuzov came to beat the French"

The proverb was born after the appointment of M. I. Kutuzov as commander-in-chief of the Russian army (August 1812) during Patriotic War and reflected the increased morale of the soldiers of the Russian army and the popular recognition of the talented commander, who brilliantly confirmed the essence of the proverb.

“Water carries down, but bondage carries it up”

In Russia (in the 16th-19th centuries), the labor of barge haulers, mainly hired peasants from non-chernozem provinces, was used to move river boats against the current. Barge haulers pulled the ships by hand, with the help of string and oars.

"The land army - one hand, and the land and sea - two"

“Salvation is not tea when Chapai cuts”

V. I. Chapaev is a hero civil war(1918-1921). He commanded the 25th Rifle Division of the Red Army, which played a significant role in the defeat of the White Army of A. Kolchak in the summer of 1919. He died in 1919.

“The Nazis wanted to visit Moscow, but left bones under it”

During the Great Patriotic War, fascist troops (from September 30 to December 5, 1941) made repeated offensive attempts to capture the city of Moscow. But by the heroic efforts of the Red Army, militia the enemy was stopped at the walls of the capital. The whole country rose to her defense. 5-6December 1941, our counter-offensive began, and by the beginning of January 1942, the Nazis were driven back from Moscow by 250 km. In the Battle of Moscow, for the first time, a major victory was won over the fascist army, which dispelled the myth of its invincibility. Siberian divisions played a big role in the victory.

“Our “Katya” is good - the soul hurts the enemies”

"Katya", "Katyusha" - the popular name of the combat vehicles of the rocket artillery of the Red Army. For the first time "Katyushas" were used in the battle of Smolensk (July 1941) of the Great Patriotic War. The powerful fire strikes of the Katyushas sowed terrible panic in the ranks of the enemy.

“The best guy in the world is our Yuri, Gagarin”

On April 12, 1961, the world's first manned flight on the Vostok spacecraft was made by a citizen of the USSR, Yuri Alekseevich Gagarin, opening a human road into space.

What is the meaning of the saying"According to Senka and a hat"?

During the reign of Ivan the Terrible, the boyars flaunted high fur hats in front of each other. It was believed: the higher the hat, the more noble family. Ordinary people had no right, and even beyond their means, to wear such luxurious hats. Hence the saying.

What does the expression mean"Screaming in all Ivanovskaya"?

In memory of his father Ivan the Great, Tsar Vasily erected the Ivan the Great Bell Tower in the Kremlin. According to the decree of the tsar, it should forever remain the tallest building in Moscow (81 meters). In those days, royal decrees were announced on the square in front of the bell tower, which must be shouted loudly so that everyone can hear.

What does the expression mean:“ov and ev gnaw crackers, and our vichis eat kalachi”?

During the reign of Ivan the Terrible, noble boyars began to be called "semi-patronymic" ending in -ov and -ev, for example: Andrey Romanov Kobyla. Possession of a patronymic ending in -vich, for example: Rurikovich, Olgovichi, Svyatoslavichi, was a sign of generosity and wealth, and only rich people could afford kalachi.

To whom were they addressed"filkin's letters" and what is the pedigree of the word"simple"?

Metropolitan Philip repeatedly turned to Ivan the Terrible with a request to cancel the oprichnina. But Ivan the Terrible to no one but his own " special people"- guardsmen - did not believe. Contemptuously called the Metropolitan "Filka" or "just Filka", and his letters "Filka's letters".

What sacred dish did our ancestors cook when concluding a peace treaty with their neighbors?

Kashu, ever since gone"You can't cook porridge with us."

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Proverbs in the lessons of the world around

Maintenance cognitive activity students in the course of monitoring the level of knowledge is an important condition for the success of the educational process. It is known, however, that the repeated reproduction of educational material by children, being important in terms of consolidation and control, reduces interest in the subject if it is carried out in a duplicative manner and in the form of simple repetition. This is especially ineffective in the lesson of the final repetition, when it is necessary to restore in the memory of students the basic concepts and information on the entire topic covered.

Entertaining forms of checking the assimilation of factual material can revive the survey and activate the work of students in the process.

Attracting proverbs to the study of the world around enriches the learning process. Thanks to the skillfully included proverbs in the outline of the lesson, natural phenomena are presented visually and figuratively, in addition, the perception of the studied material deepens, and interest in the subject increases. Bright in form, concise, they are easy to remember, contribute to the assimilation of content. subject. Proverbs teach to notice patterns in natural phenomena, contribute to the development of observation.

The use of proverbs is advisable if their content is related to specific issues of the course of the world around them, if they are available to students primary school, have a bright shape, broaden the horizons of students.

The method of using proverbs in the classroom can be varied. Some proverbs are used to illustrate natural phenomena, others - in order to explain their meaning, and thirdly - it is necessary to correlate the everyday meaning and the noticed natural pattern.

Proverbs - folk omens It is expedient to involve the weather in the study of the seasons. At the same time, it is interesting to compare the content of the proverb with the observations of students. There are riddle proverbs, solving them is always interesting for schoolchildren.

You can refer to proverbs at different stages of the lesson: when motivating learning activities , during the actualization of knowledge, during the initial consolidation, during the creative application and acquisition of knowledge in a new situation (problem tasks).

Let's illustrate the above with examples.

In the lesson “April Aquarius” (grade 1, according to the program of N.F Vinogradova), you can use the following proverbs: “April with water, May with grass”; "Don't build on ice"! "You can't get away from thunder and water."

We recommend not only to acquaint schoolchildren with these proverbs, but also to reveal their meaning. Children can easily explain the first proverb themselves. Speaking about the second, we explain to students that houses are not built either on ice or from ice: in spring the air temperature rises, the ice melts and buildings collapse, just as the ice house melted in the fairy tale about the fox and the hare.

In the spring there are the first thunders, and there summer is already close. Therefore, the proverb “You can’t get away from thunder and in water” can be associated with the rules of behavior during a thunderstorm. We explain that in this proverb we are not talking about thunder, which is not dangerous for humans, but about lightning.

As you know, lightning strikes mainly in places with good electrical conductivity. For example, a river, wet clay, swampy areas are more likely to be struck by lightning than dry sand or rocky soil. Therefore, during a thunderstorm, it is dangerous to be in the river or on the shore. In addition, lightning often strikes lonely towering objects.

So, to avoid being struck by lightning, the following rules must be observed:

- do not approach tall objects (trees, poles) and lightning rods, especially do not touch them;

- do not stay on elevated places (hills, mountains) and on open peaks;

- not to be on the banks of rivers, streams, reservoirs, not to swim in them during a thunderstorm.

When studying the topic “February is the month of snowstorms and blizzards” (Grade 1, according to the program of N.F. Vinogradova), such an explanation for the proverb “A lot of snow - a lot of bread” seems to be available. Snow, like a fur coat, protects winter crops from freezing. A lot of snow - a thick fur coat, the frost will not get to the delicate greenery.

In the outline of the lesson " September - the first month of autumn"(Grade 1, according to the program of N.F Vinogradova) it is advisable to include the following proverbs:

“September is cold, but full”;

“In September, one berry, and that bitter mountain ash”;

“Salt gets wet - to rain”;

"Tobacco is getting damp - to wet weather."

The last two proverbs can be explained as follows: before the onset of rain, there is more moisture in the air. Some substances (for example, salt and tobacco) have the ability to absorb it. Here you can also explain to children about the dangers of smoking.

It is useful to use proverbs - folk signs of the weather. Here are some of them:

"Plentiful dew - for good weather";

"Autumn hoarfrost - to dry and sunny weather";

“Fog in the morning spreads over the water - to good weather”;

“There are few stars in the sky - to bad weather”;

"Ring around the sun - to bad weather";

"The sun sets red - towards the wind."

For example, this is how signs that promise good weather can be explained. Clouds, like clothes, protect the earth from hypothermia at night. In the absence of clouds at night, the earth cools more than in cloudy weather. This causes dew and hoarfrost to fall, the appearance of fog.

It is not difficult for students to understand the “weather” sign associated with the visibility of stars in the sky and portending bad weather. As the weather worsens, cloudiness increases and faint stars become invisible, so there are few stars.

Activates the cognitive activity of students work with proverbs-riddles. They can be used when working on the topic "Natural Phenomena" (Grade 1, according to the program of N.F Vinogradova). Here are some of these proverbs:

"What knocks without hands?" (Thunder.)

"It falls to the ground, does not fly off the ground." (Rain.)

"The footbridge is paved without boards, without an ax, without a wedge." (Ice.)

“In the evening it flies to the ground, at night it stays on the ground, in the morning it flies away again.” (Dew.)

The practice of using proverbs in the lessons of the surrounding world has confirmed the effectiveness and expediency of such an activation technique. cognitive activity students.

Particularly interesting work with proverbs can be organized when working with cards. We select an expressive picture for each proverb. When talking about the seasons, we suggest choosing a suitable proverb and explaining its meaning.

The proposed methodology allows schoolchildren to better assimilate the program material, introduces them to culture, and also develops such qualities as observation, the desire to explain natural phenomena, which are necessary in the future for the full assimilation of systematic courses in physics, chemistry, and biology.

Since ancient times, the people kept their own calendar, according to which the peasant looked at the weather in the yard, followed the phenomena of nature and used proverbs to say what the coming season would be like. After all, it depended on what the harvest would be in the year, which means when and how to prepare for work in the garden and in the field.

Such a diary of nature was called a folk calendar, which from generation to generation passed on folk knowledge about nature in proverbs and sayings. Many of them do not lose their wisdom even now, suggesting about the weather and the upcoming changes of the seasons.

Let's get acquainted with the most interesting proverbs and sayings about nature, which will also become an inquisitive guide for children about the seasons.

Proverbs and sayings about nature and seasons

Proverbs and sayings about spring

In spring, snow melts and streams run merrily, the sun warms every day more strongly, birds fly in, the first grass appears, leaves on trees and flowers bloom.
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Proverbs and sayings about summer

Summer is the busiest time, people worked in the field from early morning until sunset. "What you sow, you will reap" - the people said and worked for days on end, and they looked at the harvest according to the weather.
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Proverbs and sayings about autumn

In autumn, as the people said, "seven weathers in the yard", and rain, and sun, and sleet. The most beautiful and rainiest time of the year, the trees are gilded, the wind rips off the yellow leaves, and before that, Indian summer is in the yard.
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Proverbs and sayings about winter

Winter is a long cold season, every day, then a snowstorm and a blizzard, otherwise the sun will suddenly come out, filling the sky with bright transparent rays, from which the frost is even stronger. And in the evening it can snow again, turning the night into a winter fairy tale.
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Proverbs and sayings about the world around

Proverbs and sayings about the Motherland

Motherland is our home, our native land, where you always want to return, wherever you are. Correctly say " There is no more beautiful in the world than our Motherland" And " To each his own land is sweet".
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Proverbs and sayings about family

Wherever you are, wherever you go, but there is a house where you are always welcome, waiting and loved. It's yours Friendly family. A well-known saying goes like this: Being a guest is good, but being at home is better".
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Proverbs and sayings about friendship

Friendship, if once struck up, then once and for all, and if not, then maybe this is not friendship. The people say " Life is hard without a friend".
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Proverbs and sayings about kindness

According to folk proverbs, children learn better about nature, plants and animals, natural phenomena, get acquainted with the seasons and learn the world. Proverbs often rhyme with sayings in verse, so they are consonant and easy to remember, and pictures for children with proverbs help to get an even greater visual representation of natural phenomena. Good old folk proverbs teach kindness, love for the family, for nature, for the motherland and home.

The world around in proverbs

Monthly
March.
Rooks fly to the nest by friendly spring.
How many thawed patches, so many larks.
Kulik has arrived - prepare the seeds.
Spring is a holiday for everyone.
Neither water in March, nor grass in April (Conditionally).
March water is healing (from March snow). It's for freckles and sunburn.
April.
April is the key to spring.
April will get everyone drunk.
April with water - May with grass.
In April, the raven bathes the children.
April sleeps and blows, promises warmth, and the man looks, something else will happen!
May.
In May, everything around will dress up - where with a leaf, where with a flower, and where with grass.
May is cold - a year of grain.
May frost will not squeeze out tears.
If a birch has pubescent forward - to a hot summer, maple - to a cold one.
The grass is small in May, but it feeds the cattle.
March is dry and wet May - there will be porridge and loaf.
If it rains in May, there will be rye.
May grass feeds the hungry.
A small bird is a nightingale, but May knows.
June.
June is the blush of the year.
In June, the day does not fade.
Warm June and the fish are happy.
End of flight, beginning of summer.
July.
July is the zenith of heat, the crown of summer.
July is not tired.
July is the month of berries.
In July, the water blooms.
Red evening - bright day.
Grasshoppers do not creak - hurry to remove the hay.
In July, the yard is empty, but the field is thick.
July - at least undress, and December - dress warmly.
It is not the ax that feeds the peasant, but the work of July.
August.
The month of August smells like an apple.
In August, summer is in the afternoon, and autumn is in the afternoon.
In August, the worker has three worries: to mow, to plow, and to sow. Cranes went south - wait for winter.
August is hard labor, but after that there will be a mint.
In August, the sickles are warm, the water is cold.
September.
September is the evening of the year.
In September, the forest is thinner and the bird's voice is quieter.
September is never fruitless.
Honey mushrooms appeared - the end of summer.

September is cold and full.
Since September, fire in the field and in the hut.
October.
In October, neither on wheels nor on sledges.
October is the harvest of the last fruits.
October smells like cabbage.
October is cold, but full.
The first snow falls forty days before winter.
In October, autumn is before noon, and winter is after noon.
Mine and trample flax from mid-October.
November.
November is the gate of winter.
In November, winter and autumn fight.
November is the month of arrival of winter feathered guests.
November is not winter - a pre-winter season.
November is an all-terrain vehicle.
November nights are the darkest of the year.
December.
December is the winter hat.
December comforts the eyes with snow, but tears the ear with frost.
In December it dawns late, but it gets dark early.
In frost and forty pounds is not a thing.
Jelly. December ends the year, winter begins.
January.
January is the beginning of the year, winter is the middle.
In January, the sun for summer, winter for frost.
As the day grows, so does the cold.
In January, the snow will inflate - the bread will arrive.
January is the month of bright stars, white trails, blue ice.
February.
February is full of blizzards.
Blizzards and blizzards flew into February.
February is the month of winds and crooked roads.
February has two friends: a blizzard and a blizzard.
February - wide roads.
Bokogrey. February will let the water in, March will pick it up.
Seasonal changes in nature. Superstitions are omens.
When it rains, then it's cold.
In the spring the rain soars, in the autumn it wets.
Make hay while the sun is shining.
Lots of snow, lots of bread.
Kos, spit, until the dew, down with the dew and we are home.
Salt gets wet - to rain.
Tobacco becomes damp - to damp weather.
Abundant dew - to good weather.
Autumn frost - to dry and sunny weather.
Fog spreads over the water in the morning - to good weather.
Few stars in the sky - to bad weather.
The ring around the sun - to bad weather.
The sun sets red - to the wind.
In the young month, the fish bite.
A lot of crayfish - to a good catch of fish.
A leaf develops on an oak tree - a catch of pike (censored).
When the bird cherry blossoms, then the catch is for bream.
Plow deeper - chew more bread.
Put manure thickly - the barn will not be empty.
Who sows early, does not lose seeds.
Sow in the weather - more offspring.
The frogs cry: it's time to sow.
When mosquitoes appear, it's time to sow rye.
This rye into ashes, and wheat at the right time.
Sowing rye with a north wind will give birth stronger and larger.
Rye turns green for two weeks, ears for two weeks, fades for two weeks, pours for two weeks, dries up for two weeks.
Lots of water, lots of grass.
This wheat, when spring is red.
Rowan blossoms brightly - there will be a lot of oats.
Aspen in earrings - a crop for oats.
Barley is sown while viburnum blooms.
Juniper will bloom - it's time to sow barley.
The cuckoo cuckooed - it's time to sow flax.
In the first days of the new moon, this pea.
When planting cabbage, they say: “Don’t be shinny, be pot-bellied; don’t be empty, but be thick; don’t be thick, but be tasty; don’t be old, be young; don’t be small, be great!”
Late leaf fall - for a difficult year.
Early swallows - for a happy year.
A lot of acorns on oak - for a warm winter and a fertile summer.
Ryasna raspberry - harvest for bread (tamb.).
Mold on rags - to the harvest of mushrooms.
Spring ice is sinking - for a heavy (breadless) harvest.
Dry March and wet May make good bread.
Large hoarfrost, mounds of snow, deeply frozen ground - to grain production.
When it is smooth in the field in winter, and it will be smooth in the barrel.
Cold winter - grace (foreshadows the harvest).
If the earth is not frozen, it will not give juice (after a warm winter, crop failure).
Elements - phenomena.
The storm is God's grace.
It knocks in the sky - it is heard on the earth.
If the first thunder from noon (from the south), then there will be a formidable summer.
Fire is a king, water is a queen, earth is a mother, heaven is a father, wind is a master, rain is a breadwinner, the sun is a prince, the moon is a princess.
Water and earth wears away and stone hollows.
Don't be friends with fire, with water, don't be friends with the wind, but be friends with the earth.
Don't mess with fire, don't be friends with water, don't trust the wind.
The star falls into the wind.
The first roosters (midnight), the second (before dawn), the third (dawn).
No light, no dawn (early).
You can't escape thunder and water.
Environmental proverbs.
/ Laws of Barry Comoner /
Everything is connected to everyone.
You have to pay for everything.
Everything has to go somewhere.
Nature knows best.

PROVERBS AND SAYINGS ABOUT WATER

Water wears away the stone

The meaning of the proverb:

Even if you act with weak efforts, but constantly and persistently, you can achieve a lot. It is said to cheer up someone who, having not yet had a positive result, doubts the success of his efforts.

Not knowing the ford, do not poke your head into the water.

The meaning of the proverb:

A rolling stone gathers no moss.

The meaning of the proverb:

If nothing is done, nothing will change, the matter will not move forward. It is used as a condemnation of inaction, a passive lifestyle, or as a call for vigorous activity.

Useless, meaningless activities do not give results. It is used more often as a suggestion to move from empty talk to more specific cases.

A stupa is a wooden or metal vessel in which something is pounded.

Crush - crush, crush.

Some linguists believe that this proverb has become the source of a well-known phraseological unit to crush water in a mortar - "to engage in unnecessary, useless business."

The meaning of the proverb:

Don't do anything without knowledge of the matter. It is said to (or about) who, doing something, fails due to ignorance, ignorance, can be used as a recommendation not to rush, observe, learn.

Spilled water cannot be collected.

The meaning of the proverb:

Stuffing cannot be turned back.

And you can’t restore meat from cutlets.

Still waters are deep.

The meaning of the proverb:

This proverb can be applied to people who are outwardly calm, but who have deep feelings raging deep inside.

An hour with kvass, sometimes with water.

The meaning of the proverb:

This proverb is used as an answer to the question "How are you?". It means sometimes good, sometimes not so good.

This is written on the water with a pitchfork.

The meaning of the proverb:

It is used in cases where the implementation of the possible, desired, expected is unlikely or is not known at all.

April is glorious with water.

April will get everyone drunk.

April opens the keys and water.

April with water - May with grass

Sometimes, water flows like a mountain.

The reality is that resin, and the fiction is that water.

Water in March, grass in April.

The king will not stop the spring water, the water will find a way.

Water carries down, and bondage leads up.

Water and earth wears away and stone hollows.

Water breaks the mill.

Water wears away the stone.

Water doesn't bother the mind.

Water does not cry for water.

The water breaks the dam.

Cold water - the body is vigorous.

The water is close, but it's slippery to walk.

Crush water in a mortar - and there will be water.

You dig a well deep, the water will stand high.

Where there was water, there it will be; where the money went there and accumulate.

Where the water is blocked, then it will find a way.

Where there is water, there is trouble.

Where there is water, there is willow, where there is willow, there is water.

Where there is water, there are ships.

Long droppers (icicles) - long flax.

Where the water flows, there it carries wood chips.

Better water in joy than in sorrow.

Human happiness, that the water is in a delusion.

Hollow water will tear down the gate.

The water is quiet, but the pools are deep.

February will let the water in, March will pick it up (about frosts).

It does not sink in water, and does not burn in fire

If there is no water in the tap, the Jews drank the water

And fish are caught in troubled waters

You can't spill them with water (Friends - don't spill water)

As a jug gets into the habit of walking on water, so put his head there

Like water off a duck's back

Much water has flown under the bridge since then.

They carry water on the offended

To teach the unreasonable is to pour water into a bottomless tub

He will dry out of the water

I swam on the sea, but I did not see the water

Promised by a pitchfork on the water is written

Threw the baby out with the water

Don't drink water from your face

Talk to you - carry water with a sieve

April streams wake the earth.

Water wears away the stone.

Crush water in a mortar - and there will be water.

Where the sun warms, there the water will melt.

Long icicles - long flax.

Waiting for water is not a problem, but water would come.

The water is quiet, but the pools are deep.

Still waters run deep.

He fell silent as he took water in his mouth

And fish are caught in troubled waters

Friends - do not spill water

Like water off a duck's back

Better bread and water than a pie with trouble

A frog cannot be an ox, no matter how much water you drink

Much water has flown under the bridge since then.

They carry water on the offended

Not knowing the ford, do not go into the water

You have to bend down to drink from the stream of water.

Burnt in milk, they blow on the water

A rolling stone gathers no moss

Went through fire and water and copper pipes

No matter how much water is boiled, all water will be

Bread and water are peasant food.

To eat a fish, you need to climb into the water.

The river is recognized in the course, the person - in the conversation.

Like a fish in water!

Standing by a stream, they don't value water.

Written with a pitchfork on the water.

Do not carry water in a sieve

Water will find a way.

Truth does not sink in water, does not burn in fire.

Do not spit in the well - it will come in handy to drink water.

Spare water - do not cook porridge.



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