
Text -- Proverbs 20:14 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Pro 20:14
Implying that he goes about boasting of his bargains.
Clarke -> Pro 20:14
Clarke: Pro 20:14 - -- It is naught, it is naught, saith the buyer - How apt are men to decry the goods they wish to purchase, in order that they may get them at a cheaper...
It is naught, it is naught, saith the buyer - How apt are men to decry the goods they wish to purchase, in order that they may get them at a cheaper rate; and, when they have made their bargain and carried it off, boast to others at how much less than its value they have obtained it! Are such honest men? Is such knavery actionable? Can such be punished only in another world? St. Augustine tells us a pleasant story on this subject: A certain mountebank published, in the full theater, that at the next entertainment he would show to every man present what was in his heart. The time came, and the concourse was immense; all waited, with deathlike silence, to hear what he would say to eaeh. He stood up, and in a single sentence redeemed his pledge: -
Vili vultis Emere, et Caro Vendere
You all wish to Buy Cheap, and Sell Dear.
He was applauded; for every one felt it to be a description of his own heart, and was satisfied that all others were similar. " In quo dicto levissimi scenici omnes tamen conscientias invenerunt suas .’ - De Trinitate, lib. xiii., c. 3; Oper. vol. vii., col. 930.
TSK -> Pro 20:14

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 20:14
Poole -> Pro 20:14
Poole: Pro 20:14 - -- It is naught the commodity is but of little worth. Saith the buyer, to wit, to the seller; he discommends it, that he may bring down the price of it....
It is naught the commodity is but of little worth. Saith the buyer, to wit, to the seller; he discommends it, that he may bring down the price of it.
Gone his way with the commodity purchased.
He boasteth that by his wit he hath overreached the seller, and got a great advantage to himself. This he notes as a common but reprovable practice.
Haydock -> Pro 20:14
Haydock: Pro 20:14 - -- Buyer. This is the common practice; yet it is not without exceptions. St. Augustine (Trin. xiii. 3.) observes, that the mountebank having promised ...
Buyer. This is the common practice; yet it is not without exceptions. St. Augustine (Trin. xiii. 3.) observes, that the mountebank having promised to tell what every person had in his heart, many came to the theatre, when he told them that they all wished to by cheap, and to sell dear. They all applauded the remark. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint is here defective. (Haydock)
Gill -> Pro 20:14
Gill: Pro 20:14 - -- It is naught, it is naught, saith the buyer,.... When he comes to the shop of the seller, or to market to buy goods, he undervalues them, says they ...
It is naught, it is naught, saith the buyer,.... When he comes to the shop of the seller, or to market to buy goods, he undervalues them, says they are not so good as they should be, nor so cheap as he can buy them at;
but when he is gone his way, then he boasteth; after he has brought the seller to as low a price as he can, and has bought the goods, and gone away with them, and got home among his friends; then he boasts what a bargain he has bought, how good the commodity is, how he has been too many for the seller, and has outwitted him; and so glories in his frauds and tricks, and rejoices in his boasting, and all such rejoicing is evil, Jam 4:16. Jarchi applies this to a man that is a hard student in the law, and through much difficulty gets the knowledge of it, when he is ready to pronounce himself unhappy; but when he is got full fraught with wisdom, then he rejoices at it, and glories in it.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC -> Pro 20:14
MHCC: Pro 20:14 - --Men use arts to get a good bargain, and to buy cheap; whereas a man ought to be ashamed of a fraud and a lie.
Matthew Henry -> Pro 20:14
Matthew Henry: Pro 20:14 - -- See here 1. What arts men use to get a good bargain and to buy cheap. They not only cheapen carelessly, as if they had no need, no mind for the comm...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 20:14
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 20:14 - --
The following group has its natural limit at the new point of departure at Pro 20:20, and is internally connected in a diversity of ways.
14 "Bad, ...
Constable -> Pro 10:1--22:17; Pro 19:1--22:17
Constable: Pro 10:1--22:17 - --II. COUPLETS EXPRESSING WISDOM 10:1--22:16
Chapters 1-9, as we have seen, contain discourses that Solomon eviden...
