a8a3989c83
- Updated descriptions: UNfortune->Wednesday-Style, sandman->Sandmännchen, fortune->klassische Glückskeks-Sprüche - Added new lists: idioms, vegan recipes, budandterence, unicorn - Rebuilt famous quotes with author years - Fixed syntax errors in JSON files Generated by Mistral Vibe. Co-Authored-By: Mistral Vibe <vibe@mistral.ai>
103 lines
6.5 KiB
JSON
103 lines
6.5 KiB
JSON
[
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"Morgenstund hat Gold im Mund - (Deutsche Redensart, 16. Jh.)",
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"Aller Anfang ist schwer - (Lateinisch: Omnium rerum principia parva sunt, Horaz, 13 v. Chr.)",
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"Der frühe Vogel fängt den Wurm - (Englisches Sprichwort, 17. Jh.)",
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"Wer rastet, der rostet - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Eile mit Weile - (Deutsche Redensart, 17. Jh.)",
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"Man soll den Tag nicht vor dem Abend loben - (Deutsche Redensart, 16. Jh.)",
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"Wer anderen eine Grube gräbt, fällt selbst hinein - (Bibel / Sprüche 26,27, ca. 600 v. Chr.)",
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"Hochmut kommt vor dem Fall - (Bibel / Sprüche 16,18, ca. 600 v. Chr.)",
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"Der Klügere gibt nach - (Friedrich Schiller, 1793)",
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"Ehrlich währt am längsten - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Not bricht Eisen - (Deutsche Redensart, 15. Jh.)",
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"Gemeinsam ist man weniger allein - (Deutsche Redensart, 19. Jh.)",
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"Ein jeder ist seines Glückes Schmied - (Friedrich Schiller, 1793)",
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"Gut Ding will Weile haben - (Deutsche Redensart, 17. Jh.)",
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"Der Apfel fällt nicht weit vom Stamm - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Was du heute kannst besorgen, das verschiebe nicht auf morgen - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Man lernt nie aus - (Deutsche Redensart, 19. Jh.)",
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"Wer A sagt, muss auch B sagen - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Alles hat ein Ende - (Deutsche Redensart, 16. Jh.)",
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"Stolz kommt vor dem Sturz - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Selbst ist der Mann - (Deutsche Redensart, 19. Jh.)",
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"Früh übt sich, was ein Meister werden will - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Erst denken, dann handeln - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Faulheit ist des Teufels Kissen - (Deutsche Redensart, 17. Jh.)",
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"Gleich und gleich gesellt sich gern - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Kleider machen Leute - (Gottfried Keller, 1874)",
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"Mit Speck fängt man Mäuse - (Deutsche Redensart, 17. Jh.)",
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"Nachts sind alle Katzen grau - (Deutsche Redensart, 17. Jh.)",
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"Nichts wird so heiß gegessen, wie es gekocht wird - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Viele Köche verderben den Brei - (Deutsche Redensart, 18. Jh.)",
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"Wenn der Hahn kräht auf dem Mist, ändert sich das Wetter oder es bleibt wie es ist - (Deutsche Bauernregel, 16. Jh.)",
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"The early bird catches the worm - (English Proverb, 17th Century)",
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"A stitch in time saves nine - (English Proverb, 18th Century)",
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"Don't count your chickens before they hatch - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"Every cloud has a silver lining - (English Proverb, 19th Century)",
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"A rolling stone gathers no moss - (English Proverb, 15th Century)",
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"Better late than never - (English Proverb, 14th Century)",
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"Birds of a feather flock together - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"Don't put all your eggs in one basket - (English Proverb, 17th Century)",
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"Fortune favors the bold - (Latin: Audentes fortuna iuvat, Virgil, 19 v. Chr.)",
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"In vino veritas - (Latin Proverb, Ancient Rome)",
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"Alea iacta est - (Julius Caesar, 49 v. Chr.)",
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"Veni, vidi, vici - (Julius Caesar, 47 v. Chr.)",
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"Carpe diem - (Horaz, 23 v. Chr.)",
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"Memento mori - (Ancient Roman Proverb)",
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"Tempus fugit - (Virgil, 19 v. Chr.)",
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"Cogito, ergo sum - (René Descartes, 1637)",
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"E pluribus unum - (Motto der USA, 1776)",
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"In God we trust - (Motto der USA, 1956)",
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"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity - (Französische Revolution, 1789)",
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"Through hardship to the stars - (Seneca, 1. Jh. n. Chr.)",
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"To be or not to be - (William Shakespeare, 1603)",
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"All the world's a stage - (William Shakespeare, 1601)",
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"The course of true love never did run smooth - (William Shakespeare, 1595)",
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"To thine own self be true - (William Shakespeare, 1601)",
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"Brevity is the soul of wit - (William Shakespeare, 1601)",
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"The better part of valor is discretion - (William Shakespeare, 1599)",
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"Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown - (William Shakespeare, 1597)",
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"All that glitters is not gold - (William Shakespeare, 1596)",
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"The quality of mercy is not strained - (William Shakespeare, 1598)",
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"To sleep, perchance to dream - (William Shakespeare, 1601)",
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"The winter of our discontent - (William Shakespeare, 1593)",
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"Once more unto the breach - (William Shakespeare, 1599)",
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"Something is rotten in the state of Denmark - (William Shakespeare, 1603)",
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"The lady doth protest too much - (William Shakespeare, 1602)",
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"Neither a borrower nor a lender be - (William Shakespeare, 1600)",
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"What's in a name? - (William Shakespeare, 1597)",
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"Parting is such sweet sorrow - (William Shakespeare, 1597)",
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"The green-eyed monster - (William Shakespeare, 1604)",
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"Wild-goose chase - (William Shakespeare, 1598)",
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"Heart of gold - (William Shakespeare, 1599)",
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"Wear my heart upon my sleeve - (William Shakespeare, 1605)",
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"In a pickle - (William Shakespeare, 1602)",
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"The world is my oyster - (William Shakespeare, 1601)",
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"Off with his head - (William Shakespeare, 1593)",
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"For goodness' sake - (William Shakespeare, 1600)",
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"A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"Don't look a gift horse in the mouth - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"Every man for himself - (English Proverb, 18th Century)",
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"Hope springs eternal - (Alexander Pope, 1733)",
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"It is the early bird that catches the worm - (English Proverb, 17th Century)",
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"Jack of all trades, master of none - (English Proverb, 17th Century)",
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"Love conquers all - (Virgil, 19 v. Chr.)",
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"Make hay while the sun shines - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"Never put off till tomorrow what you can do today - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"No pain, no gain - (English Proverb, 20th Century)",
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"One good turn deserves another - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"Practice makes perfect - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"Rome wasn't built in a day - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"Still waters run deep - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"The grass is always greener on the other side - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"Time and tide wait for no man - (English Proverb, 14th Century)",
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"Too many cooks spoil the broth - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"Two wrongs don't make a right - (English Proverb, 18th Century)",
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"When in Rome, do as the Romans do - (Saint Ambrose, 4th Century)",
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"You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink - (English Proverb, 12th Century)",
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"You can't have your cake and eat it too - (English Proverb, 16th Century)",
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"You can't judge a book by its cover - (English Proverb, 19th Century)",
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"A penny for your thoughts - (English Proverb, 16th Century)"
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"If the shoe fits, wear it - (English Proverb, 19th Century)"
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]
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