వెలుగు నీడ గ్రామం తోడు

velugu nida gramam todu

Translation

Light and shadow accompany the village.

Meaning

This expression refers to the inevitable coexistence of opposites. Just as light and shadow are inseparable in a landscape, joy and sorrow, or good and bad, always exist together within a community or life in general.

Related Phrases

Without light there is no darkness, and without darkness there is no light.

This expression highlights the concept of duality and interdependence. It signifies that opposites define each other; we cannot understand or appreciate success without failure, joy without sorrow, or good without evil. It is used to explain that contrasting elements are essential parts of a whole existence.

Will lust decrease if one wears a religious mark (Naamam)?

This proverb highlights that outward displays of piety or religious symbols do not necessarily change one's internal character or base desires. It is used to point out hypocrisy or the futility of using external rituals to mask internal flaws.

Daily allowance is like torchlight - a meal's ration is like a stick's flame.

This proverb describes the fleeting nature of income and sustenance. It suggests that a full day's earnings provide a strong, steady light (security), whereas living hand-to-mouth (a single meal's worth) offers only a weak, temporary flicker. It is used to contrast stable financial planning with precarious, short-term survival.

The bear is witness for the bloodsucker or The hedge is witness for the bloodsucker. According to the first interpretation, a band of Mahomedan freebooters, when seeking on one occasion to discover treasure which had been buried by the inhabitants of a plundered village, having perceived first a chameleon nodding on certain spots and afterwards a bear sniffing in the same places, spent much labour in digging up the earth, but all in vain.—The applica- tion is that natural habits are not to be taken notice of. According to others, the hedge where the chameleon lives should be questioned as to the latter's veracity and character,—the application being that the evidence of one man should be corroborated by that of another. Ask my chum if I am a thief. (Italian.)

This proverb is used to describe a situation where two people who are equally unreliable or biased support each other's claims. It suggests that a witness is just as questionable as the person they are defending, or that their support is expected because of their close association.

Cleaning or mopping the house does not mean the festival has arrived.

This proverb is used to warn against premature celebration or assuming a task is complete based on superficial initial actions. Just as mopping a floor is only a preliminary step for a festival, one must complete the actual hard work or wait for the true results before claiming success.

A son-in-law is not a permanent relative, and the shadow of a castor oil plant is not real shade.

This proverb highlights the transitory or unreliable nature of certain things. Just as the castor oil plant is too small and thin to provide substantial or lasting shade, a son-in-law's primary allegiance is to his own family, making his presence in the natal family's affairs temporary or unreliable in the long run. It is used to caution against over-dependence on people or things that lack depth or permanence.

Hot water added to cold water

This expression is used to describe a situation where two people or things provide mutual support, even if one's contribution is small. It often refers to a husband and wife or partners helping each other to make life more comfortable and manageable, just as mixing hot and cold water results in a pleasant temperature.

The lamp about to go out gives sudden brilliance.

This suggests subtly the final glow or false promise before the approaching end. There is a saying cavu telivi: that before death one gets brilliant idea(s)

The hedge is [my] shade, and the village [my] help. Utterly helpless.

This expression refers to the inevitable coexistence of opposites. Just as light is always accompanied by shadow, life in a community or village involves both support and interference, or pros and cons. It is used to describe how certain things are inseparable or how one must accept the bad with the good.

The shadow of a palm tree is not a real shade, and a paramour is not a husband.

This proverb highlights that some things are unreliable or lack substance despite appearances. Just as the tall palm tree provides very little actual shade for someone seeking cover, a person in a casual or illicit relationship cannot provide the security, commitment, or social standing of a spouse. It is used to describe temporary or deceptive situations that fail to offer true protection or long-term stability.