Proverbs 23:8

8 Your morsel you have eaten, you will vomit it up, and you will waste your pleasant words.

Proverbs 23:8 Meaning and Commentary

Proverbs 23:8

The morsel [which] thou hast eaten, shalt thou vomit up
It shall turn in thy stomach, thou shall not be able to keep it, when thou understandest thou art not welcome; or thou wilt wish thou hadst never eaten a bit, or that thou couldest vomit up what thou hast; so disagreeable is the thought of being unwelcome, or when this appears to be the case; and lose thy sweet words;
expressed in thankfulness to the master of the feast, in praise of his food, in pleasantry with him, and the other guests at table; all which are repented of when a man finds he is not welcome.

Proverbs 23:8 In-Context

6 Do not eat the bread of {the stingy}, and do not desire his delicacies.
7 For, like hair in his {throat}, so it is. "Eat and drink!" he will say to you, but his heart will not be with you.
8 Your morsel you have eaten, you will vomit it up, and you will waste your pleasant words.
9 In the ears of a fool do not speak, for he will despise the wisdom of your words.
10 Do not remove an ancient boundary marker, and on the fields of orphans do not encroach;
Scripture quotations marked (LEB) are from the Lexham English Bible. Copyright 2012 Logos Bible Software. Lexham is a registered trademark of Logos Bible Software.