Proverbs 6:2
yee thou art boude with thine owne wordes, and taken wt thine owne speach.
yee thou art boude with thine owne wordes, and taken wt thine owne speach.
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
1My sone, yf thou be suertie for yi neghboure, thou hast fastened thine hode wt another ma:
3Therfore (my sonne) do this, discharge thy self, for thou art come i to yi neghbours daunger. Go thy waye then soone, & intreate thy neghboure:
5but thy wickednesse teacheth thy mouth, and so thou hast chosen the a craftie tonge.
6Thine owne mouth condemneth the, and not I: yee thine owne lippes shappe the an answere.
19Thou lettest yi mouth speake wickednesse, & thy tonge paynteth disceate.
20Thou syttest and speakest agaynst thy brother, yee and slaundrest thine owne mothers sonne.
25lest thou lerne his wayes, and receaue hurte vnto thy soule.
26Be not thou one of them yt bynde ther hande vpo promyse, and are suertie for dett:
13The wicked falleth in to the snare thorow ye malyce of his owne mouth, but the iust shal escape out of parell.
14Euery man shal enioye good acordinge to the innocency of his mouth, and after the workes of his hades shal he be rewarded.
8For his fete shalbe taken in the nett, and he shal walke in the snare.
6A fooles lippes are euer brawlinge, and his mouth prouoketh vnto batayll.
7A fooles mouth is his owne destruccion, and his lippes are ye snare for his owne soule.
10The snare is layed for him in the grounde, and a pytfall in the waye.
10Therfore art thou compased aboute with snares on euery syde, & sodely vexed wt feare.
37Out of thy wordes thou shalt be iustified, & out of thy wordes thou shalt be codemned.
18Who so promiseth by the hande, & is suertie for another, he is a foole.
17Neuerthelesse, thou hast condemned the iudgment of the vngodly, yee euen soch a iudgment and sentence shalt thou suffre.
18For then shal not thy cause be stilled with crueltie, ner pacified with many giftes.
27Ye fall vpon the fatherlesse, ad go aboute to ouerthrowe youre owne frende.
8Yee ye morsels that thou hast eaten shalt thou perbreake, and lese those swete wordes.
24that they maye kepe the fro the euell woman, & from the flaterynge tonge of the harlott:
16That thou mayest be delyuered also from the straunge woman, and from her that is not thine owne: which geueth swete wordes,
12The wordes out of a wyse mans mouth are gracious, but the lippes of a foole wil destroye himself.
21Put the vp together in thine herte, and bynde the aboute thy necke.
22That they maye lede the where thou goest, preserue the when thou art aslepe, & yt when thou awakest, thou mayest talke of the
6Vse not thy mouth to cause yi flesh for to synne, yt thou saye not before the angell: my foolishnesse is in ye faute. For the God wil be angrie at thy voyce, and destroye all ye workes of thine handes.
26An harlot wil make a ma to begg his bred, but a maried woman wil hunt for ye precious life.
6Put thou nothinge therfore vnto his wordes, lest he reproue the, and thou be founde as a lyar.
24I myself haue layed wayte for the, & thou art taken: vnawarres art thou trapped & snared: for why, thou hast prouoked ye LORDE vnto anger:
18for it is a pleasaunt thinge yf thou kepe it in thine herte, and practise it in thy mouth:
22The wickednesses of the vngodly shal catch himself, and with the snares of his owne synnes shal he be trapped.
2yt thou mayest regarde good councell, and that thy lippes maye kepe nurtoure.
16Take his garment that is suertie for a straunger, & take a pledge of him for ye vnknowne mans sake.
23Who so kepeth his mouth and his tonge, the same kepeth his soule from troubles.
1My sonne, yf thou wilt receaue my wordes, and kepe my comaundemetes by the,
5Speares and snares are in ye waye of the frowarde, but he yt wil kepe his soule, let him fle fro soch.
13yt thy mynde is so puft vp agaynst God & lettest soch wordes go out of thy mouth?
21soch as laboure to drawe me vnto synne: and yt disceaue him, which reproueth them in the gate, & soch as turne good personnes to vanite.
5Let no man beleue his frende, ner put his confidece in a prince. Kepe the porte of thy mouth, from her yt lieth in thy bosome:
5Saue thy self as a doo fro ye honde, & as a byrde fro the hode of the fouler.
4Thou louest vngraciousnesse more the good, to talke of lyes more then rightuousnesse.
25It is a snare for a man to blaspheme that which is holy, & then to go aboute wt vowes.
12For ye synne of their mouth, for the wordes of their lippes, & because of their pryde, let the be taken: & why? their preachinge is of cursynge & lyes.
5that she maye kepe ye fro ye strauge woma, & fro ye harlot which geueth swete wordes.
15He that is suertye for a straunger, hurteth himself: but he that medleth not with suerteshippe, is sure.
2Let another ma prayse the, & not thine owne mouth: yee other folkes lippes, and not thyne.
4Because of the wordes of thy lippes, I haue kepte me fro the workes of men, in ye waye off the murthurer.
10My sonne, cosente not vnto synners,
21Death and life stonde in the power of the tonge, he that loueth it, shal enioye the frute therof.