Practice Makes Perfect
Posted by Capable wingnut on November 22, 2001
In Reply to: Practice Makes Perfect posted by masakim on November 21, 2001
: : : Where does the phrase practice makes perfect come from. Please let me know?
: : : Kevin
: : PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT - 'The more you practice, the better your skills are. The proverb has been traced back to the 1550s-1560s, when its form was 'Use makes perfect.' The Latin version is: 'Uses promptos facit.' First attested in the United States in 'Diary and Autobiography of John Adams' ." From Random House Dictionary of Popular Proverbs and Sayings by Gregory Y. Titelman (Random House, New York, 1996).
: Uor wone maketh ["th" is originally a thorn]
maister. (_Ayenbite_, 1340)
: For use maketh mastery. (_Detection ... of Dice
Play_, c1530)
: Vse makes maistry. (Heywood, _Proverbs_, 1546)
: Eloquence
was vsed, and through practise made perfect. (T. Wilson, _Arte of Rhetorique_,
1560)
: Forsooth as vse makes perfectnes, so seldome seene is soone forgotten.
(H. Porter, _Two Angry Women of Abington_, 1599)
: Practice makes perfect.
(J. Adams, _Diary_, 1761)
: For practice makes perfect, as often I've read.
(Anstey, _New Bath Guide_, 1766)
I prefer the phrase - practice makes perverts