nothing ventured, nothing gained

English

Etymology

Attested since 1546 in a book of English proverbs by John Heywood (see quotation below). Perhaps translated from or influenced by French Qui onques rien n'enprist riens n'achieva (“One who never undertook anything never gained anything”).

Proverb

nothing ventured, nothing gained

  1. If one takes no risks, one will not gain any benefits.
    • 1546, John Heywood, A dialogue conteinyng the nomber in effect of all the prouerbes in the englishe tongue compacte in a matter concernyng two maner of mariages, The fyrste parte. The leuenth chapiter:
      Noght vēter noght haue spare to speke spare to spede
      Nothing venture, nothing have; spare to speak, spare success
    • 1842, E.S.J., “Julia Dayton: Or the power of truth over error”, in Universalist Union, page 609:
      Her husband was one of those unfortunate men, called speculators. He believed that to gain thousands, thousands must be put in jeopardy—“nothing ventured, nothing gained,” was his rule, and he practiced it to perfection.
    • 1944, W. Julian King, The Unwritten Laws of Engineering, page 22:
      Do not allow the danger of making a mistake to inhibit your initiative to the point of “nothing ventured, nothing gained.” It is much healthier to expect to make mistakes, take a few good risks now and then, and take your medicine when you lose.

Synonyms

Similar phrases using elliptical causation ("if/then"):

Translations

References

  • Gregory Y. Titelman, Random House Dictionary of Popular Proverbs and Sayings, 1996, →ISBN, p. 255.
  • Gary Martin (2019), “Nothing ventured, nothing gained”, in The Phrase Finder
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