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15 One can put on gold and abundant jewels,
    but wise lips are the most precious ornament.[a]
16 Take the garment of the one who became surety for a stranger;(A)
    if for foreigners, exact the pledge![b]
17 Bread earned by deceit is sweet,
    but afterward the mouth is filled with gravel.

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Footnotes

  1. 20:15 Wisdom is said to be preferable to gold in 3:14; 8:10, 19; 16:16. Colon B suggests that the gold and jewelry here are ornaments for the face (cf. Gn 24:53; Ex 3:22; Is 61:10). Wise lips are the most beautiful adornment, for they display the wisdom of the heart.
  2. 20:16 The text is not clear. See 27:13. Caution in becoming surety is always advised (cf. 6:1–3), and it is especially advisable with strangers.