What do you mean? - Answers

 

a.      It can be no other than a maleficient horizontally propelled current of gaseous matter   whose portentous advent is not the harbinger of a modicum of beneficence.                

 It’s an ill wind that blows no good.

          

b.  A rotating lithoidal fragment never accrues lichen.                

     A rolling stone gathers no moss.

 

 c.  Tenants of vitreous abodes ought to hurl no lithoidal fragments.

 People who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.

 

e.  Compute not your immature gallinaceans prior to their being produced.   

      Don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched.

 

f.       It is fruitless to become lachrymose over scattered lacteal fluid.     

      It’s no use crying over spilt milk.

 

g.     Cleave gramineous manner for fodder during the period that the orb of the day is refulgent.

      Make hay while the sun shines.

 

h.     Not every article which coruscates is fashioned from aureate metal.

      All that glitters is not gold.

 

i.        That prudent avis which matutinally deserts its cosy abode will ensnare a vermiculate creature.

     The early bird catches the worm.

 

j.        Descry your tentative landing site prior to vaulting yourself skyward.

     Look before you leap.

 

k.     One complete in-and-out movement of a threaded needle as a preventative measure precludes the necessity for a nonad of the same as a remedial measure.

     A stitch in time saves nine.

 

l.        Warm-blooded, egg-laying, feathered vertebrates of like genus are predisposed to congregating.

      Birds of a feather flock together.

 

m.   A single warm-blooded, egg-laying, feathered vertebrate currently encircled by one's anterior digits can be considered to be equal in value to a pair of such vertebrates currently in an area overgrown with common, uncultivated plants.

      A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.

 

n.      You cannot estimate the value of the contents of a bound, printed narrative or record from its exterior vesture.          

      You can’t judge a book by its cover.

 

o.     Folks deficient in ordinary judgment scurryingly enter areas of   which celestial beings dread to set foot.          

      Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.

 

p.     A feathered creature clasped in the manual members is equal in value to a brace in the bosky growth.                                                           

     A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.

 

q.     The individual of the Class Aves, arriving before the appointed time, seizes the invertebrate animal of the Group Vernes.

     The early bird catches the worm.

 

r.        Socially oriented individuals tend to congregate in gregariously homogeneous groups.

       Birds of a feather flock together.

 

s.      One may address a member of the Equidae family toward acqueous liquid, but one is incapable of compelling him to quaff. 

       You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink it.

 

t.       Avoid the enumeration of domestic edible fowl prior to the moment at which they emerge from their prenatal containers.

Don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched.

 

u.     Individuals who perforce are constrained to be domiciled in vitreous structures of patent frangibility should on no account employ petrous formations as projectiles.

People who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.

 

v.     A mass of concentrated earthly material perennially rotating on its axis will not accumulate an accretion of bryophytic vegetation.

A rolling stone gathers no moss.