Talált 171 Eredmények: precious stones

  • a prostitute can be bought for a hunk of bread, but a married woman aims to snare a precious life. (Proverbs 6, 26)

  • For Wisdom is more precious than jewels, and nothing else is so worthy of desire. (Proverbs 8, 11)

  • The idle has no game to roast; diligence is anyone's most precious possession. (Proverbs 12, 27)

  • A time for throwing stones away, a time for gathering them; a time for embracing, a time to refrain from embracing. (Ecclesiastes 3, 5)

  • he who quarries stones gets hurt by them, he who chops wood takes a risk from it. (Ecclesiastes 10, 9)

  • I reckoned no precious stone to be her equal, for compared with her, all gold is a pinch of sand, and beside her, silver ranks as mud. (Wisdom of Solomon 7, 9)

  • And this became a snare for life: that people, whether enslaved by misfortune or by tyranny, should have conferred the ineffable Name on sticks and stones. (Wisdom of Solomon 14, 21)

  • For the whole world was on his flowing robe, the glorious names of the Fathers engraved on the four rows of stones, and your Majesty on the diadem on his head. (Wisdom of Solomon 18, 24)

  • her fetters you will find a mighty defence, her collars, a precious necklace. (Ecclesiasticus 6, 29)

  • To build your house with other people's money is like collecting stones for your own tomb. (Ecclesiasticus 21, 8)

  • Throw stones at birds and you scare them away, reproach a friend and you destroy a friendship. (Ecclesiasticus 22, 20)

  • A peg will stick in the joint between two stones, and sin will wedge itself between selling and buying. (Ecclesiasticus 27, 2)


“Deus ama quem segue o caminho da virtude.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina