Mr. Chow: I want my purse back, assholes. Phil Wenneck: What, your purse? Alan Garner: That's not a purse. That's a satchel! Mr. Chow: It's a purse! Okay? And you steal from wrong guy!
Sickness soaks the purse.
There is no lock on the purse of a gambler.
The best friends are in one's purse.
Lovers' purses are tied with cobwebs.
Moderate profits fill the purse.
Virtue carries an empty purse.
Your wife's eyes are in your purse.
Words do not fill your purse.
A bashful beggar has an empty purse.
You are worth as much as your purse.
The heaviest baggage for a traveller is an empty purse.
It is the small expenses that empty your purse.
The best parents are both purses for money and sacks for the corn.
Laughing wife, crying purse.
Giving alms never lessens the purse.
[H]is mouth pursed, but pursed in American, more generous than English pursing, ready for broader vowels and less mincing sounds. His body was long and lean and trim; he had American hips, ready for a neat belt and the faraway ghost of a gunbelt.
All water flows into the ocean or into the purse of the rich.
Let no one look into your heart or into your purse.
Better an empty purse than an empty head.
A blow to another's purse is like a blow to a mountain of sand.