అంగిట విషం, మున్నాలిక తియ్యదనం

angita visham, munnalika tiyyadanam

Translation

Poison in the palate, sweetness on the tip of the tongue

Meaning

This proverb is used to describe a hypocritical person who speaks very sweetly and kindly to one's face but harbors malicious intentions or hatred in their heart. It warns against being deceived by charming words from someone who is internally deceitful.

Related Phrases

O Tongue! Tongue! don't bring strokes on my back. The tongue talks at the head's cost. Let not the tongue utter what the head must pay for. (Spanish.)

This proverb is a warning to speak carefully. It implies that loose talk, insults, or thoughtless words can lead to physical confrontation or trouble for the person who spoke them. It emphasizes the importance of self-control in speech to avoid negative consequences.

To ruin whom are you disguised as a Jangam? . Said to an impostor.

This expression is used to question someone's true intentions when they are acting deceptively or pretending to be someone they are not. It implies that the person has put on a 'mask' or a fake persona specifically to cheat, betray, or cause significant loss (ruining the 'homestead') to another person.

Mother is poison, wife is jaggery

This expression describes a situation where a person, influenced by their spouse, begins to view their own mother's advice or presence as toxic or bitter, while finding everything the spouse says to be sweet and desirable. It is used to criticize someone who neglects their parents after marriage.

Whispered counsels are a cause of ruin [to others].

This proverb suggests that secret schemes, conspiracies, or malicious gossip often result in the downfall or ruin of homes and families. It emphasizes that backbiting and clandestine plotting cause unnecessary destruction in society.

Poison is the antidote for poison.

This expression is used to suggest that a problem or an evil force can only be neutralized or countered by something of its own nature or intensity. It is similar to the English proverb 'Fight fire with fire' or 'Like cures like.'

Poison in the palate, sweetness on the tip of the tongue.

This proverb describes a hypocritical person who speaks very sweetly and kindly to one's face but harbors malicious intentions or hatred in their heart. It is equivalent to the English expression 'A honey tongue, a heart of gall.'

Full of courtesy, full of craft.

Molasses in the roof of the mouth, and poison in the heart.

This proverb describes a hypocrite who speaks very sweetly or kindly to your face while harboring malicious intent or hatred in their heart. It is used to warn someone about people whose words do not match their true internal feelings.

Honey in his mouth, words of milk; Gall in his heart, fraud in his deeds. ( Latin. )*

Sweet on the tongue, poison inside

This expression describes a hypocritical person who speaks very kindly and sweetly to your face but harbors malicious intentions or hatred in their heart. It is used to warn others about deceitful people who hide their true nature behind pleasant words.

If it's within reach, grab the hair; if not, grab the feet.

This proverb describes a person who is highly opportunistic and inconsistent. It refers to someone who acts arrogant or tries to dominate when they have the upper hand (grabbing the hair), but becomes extremely submissive or begs for mercy when they are in a weak position (falling at the feet).

There is no sweetness in a neem tree within a well.

This proverb suggests that things do not change their inherent nature simply because of their environment. Just as a neem tree remains bitter even if it grows near a source of fresh water like a well, a person's core character or the fundamental quality of a thing remains unchanged regardless of external circumstances.