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Famous aphorisms about saving food

A collection of famous sayings and aphorisms about saving food

1. Cherish the clothes you have, and cherish the food you have.

2. If you cherish your clothes, you will have clothes to wear; if you cherish your food, you will have food to eat.

3. If the water flows slowly, there will be no worries in case of disaster.

4. The drizzle makes a river, and the grains of rice make a basket.

5. When you need a full meal, why do you need eight treasures and nine tripods? A body of seven feet can be used by thousands of households?

6. A pound of grain, a thousand grains of sweat, save food Be frugal and careful.

7. Save money on meals, and save money on clothes every day.

8. Save money on cigarettes and alcohol, and seek help in times of emergency.

9. Ten spoons make a bowl of rice.

10. If the food is not good enough, it can satisfy the hunger; if the body is not rich, it can be covered.

11. Who loves fashion and high style, but pity the frugal dresser.

12. Diligence and frugality make the warehouse full of food, but lavishness and extravagance bring the bottom of the warehouse bare.

13. Store a spoonful of rice a day, and a stone of grain for a thousand days.

14. A grain of rice requires ninety-nine labors.

15. Who knows that every piece of food on the plate is hard work.

16. I forget to shrink my hand when there is more left behind, but there is no way to look back.

17. It takes three years of rotten rice to build a tall building, and three years of gruel to buy a cow.

18. A grain of rice, a drop of sweat, a grain of grain and a drop of sweat.

19. Even if you earn thousands of pounds of food, you still need simple food.

20. The mouth is a bottomless pit. Eating big is better than gambling

21. Save money when there is a shortage, save money when there is a shortage, and save when there is a shortage.

22. One porridge and one meal are worth the sweat.

23. Save rice today, save oil tomorrow, and buy a big ox next year.

24. Plan carefully for half a year’s food.

25. A porridge and a meal should be thought of as hard-won, and half a strand of persistent thoughts are hard to come by.

26. The family has thousands of burdens, but they don’t take off to mend their clothes and don’t throw away leftovers.

27. When it comes to eating, it’s home-cooked meals, and when it comes to wearing coarse clothes.

28. No matter how much grain you have, you still need to prepare several pots of wild vegetables.

29. Use benefits to settle down and use money to deal with hardships.

30. The mouse still has three cents of food left. The head of the grain is not thrifty, and the tail of the grain is called rice.

31. Gold has no seeds, it comes from thrifty families.

32. One or two coals, one piece of charcoal, a little can make a lot of cooked rice.

33. There is storage every year, and there will be no shortage of people in famine years.

34. When food is put into the warehouse, don’t forget disasters and famines.

35. There are thousands of hectares of fertile land, and one liter of solar eclipse. There are thousands of rooms in the mansion, and seven feet of sleeping space at night.

36. Rice bran for half a year.

37. Coarse tea and light food, but a steady flow of water.

38. Eat and drink a lot to look after the present, eat frugally to survive the famine.

39. A good harvest should be celebrated in a lean year.

40. Even if you have a good harvest, you still need a simple meal.

41. When eating, you should remember the kindness of cows and horses, and when wearing silk, you should remember the silkworm breeders.

42. Go out and walk to check the wind direction, dress and eat, and measure your belongings.

43. It’s noon on the day of hoeing, and the sweat is dripping from the soil. Who would have thought that every meal on the plate is hard work?

44. You can grow old with simple food and rice; you can grow old with coarse cloth and cotton-padded clothes.

45. The family has thousands of stones of food, but the pile will not grow long.

46. If you plan carefully for half a year, you will not suffer in bad years.

47. A porridge and a meal, when you think about the difficulty of getting there; half a thread, half a thread, always think about the difficulty of material resources.

48. Don’t forget the hardship of farmers when eating, and don’t forget the busyness of workers when dressing.

49. If you are not a householder, you don’t know how expensive firewood and rice are.

50. Save a mouthful when you are full, and get a bucket when you are hungry.

51. Love clothes to keep you warm and food to keep you full.