Fine speech is not (A)becoming to a fool;
    still less is (B)false speech to a prince.

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Excess speech is not becoming to a fool;
    still less is false speech to a ruler.[a]

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Footnotes

  1. 17.7 Or a noble

10 A rebuke goes deeper into a man of understanding
    than a hundred blows into a fool.

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10 A rebuke strikes deeper into a discerning person
    than a hundred blows into a fool.

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12 Let a man meet (A)a she-bear robbed of her cubs
    (B)rather than a fool in his folly.

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12 Better to meet a she-bear robbed of its cubs
    than to confront a fool immersed in folly.(A)

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16 Why should a fool have money in his hand (A)to buy wisdom
    when he has no sense?

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16 Why should fools have a price in hand
    to buy wisdom when they have no mind to learn?

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24 (A)The discerning sets his face toward wisdom,
    but the eyes of a fool are on the ends of the earth.
25 (B)A foolish son is a grief to his father
    (C)and bitterness to (D)her who bore him.

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24 The discerning person looks to wisdom,
    but the eyes of a fool to the ends of the earth.(A)
25 Foolish children are a grief to their father
    and bitterness to her who bore them.(B)

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28 Even a fool (A)who keeps silent is considered wise;
    when he closes his lips, he is deemed intelligent.

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28 Even fools who keep silent are considered wise;
    when they close their lips, they are deemed intelligent.(A)

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