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Life & Wisdom Quote by Publilius Syrus

"Practice is the best of all instructors"

About this Quote

A Roman line that sounds like a bumper sticker until you remember who’s talking: Publilius Syrus, a former enslaved man turned celebrated writer of maxims, working in a culture where rhetoric and performance weren’t hobbies but survival skills. “Practice is the best of all instructors” isn’t inspirational fluff; it’s a hard-eyed ranking of authority. Not theory, not pedigree, not even talent gets the final word. Repetition does.

The intent is pragmatic and faintly corrective. Rome loved teachers, schools, and polished speechifying, but Syrus points to the quieter engine underneath: habit. “Instructor” is doing sly work here. Practice isn’t just preparation; it actively teaches, shaping the body and mind through consequences. You learn because the task pushes back. The subtext is anti-elitist in a society built on status. You can’t argue your way into competence. You can’t inherit it. You can only accumulate it.

Context matters: Syrus wrote sententiae, compact moral observations designed to be memorized, quoted, deployed. In that economy of language, “best” is a provocation. It demotes the lecture and elevates the grind, a message that flatters neither the comfortable nor the complacent. It also carries a performer’s logic: onstage, the audience doesn’t grade your intentions, only what lands. Practice becomes the one tutor that never lies, never consoles, never negotiates.

The line still works because it refuses modern loopholes. It doesn’t promise that practice is pleasant or fair, only that it’s instructive. In an age addicted to hacks and hot takes, Syrus insists on the old scandal: mastery is mostly repetition.

Quote Details

TopicTraining & Practice
Source
Later attribution: The Moral Sayings of Publius Syrus, A Roman Slave (Publilius Syrus, 1856) modern compilation
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Practice is the best of all instructors. (Saying no. 439 (page number not shown in the online text view)). This exact English wording appears as Saying 439 in D. Lyman Jr.'s 1856 translation/collection of the Sententiae (moral sayings) attributed to Publilius Syrus. This is an early traceable publication for the English form of the quote, but it is not a surviving primary text written/published by Publilius Syrus himself (his mimes are largely lost; the sayings were later excerpted/compiled). So: primary ancient “first spoken/published” cannot be firmly established from extant evidence; this 1856 book is a verifiable early printed source for the English version.
Other candidates (1)
Practice Makes Perfect (Simon Horsey, 2011) compilation95.0%
... Publilius Syrus observed , “ Practice is the best of all instructors . " He wasn't degrading teachers , or even s...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Syrus, Publilius. (2026, February 18). Practice is the best of all instructors. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/practice-is-the-best-of-all-instructors-34538/

Chicago Style
Syrus, Publilius. "Practice is the best of all instructors." FixQuotes. February 18, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/practice-is-the-best-of-all-instructors-34538/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Practice is the best of all instructors." FixQuotes, 18 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/practice-is-the-best-of-all-instructors-34538/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.

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Practice is the Best of All Instructors
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About the Author

Publilius Syrus

Publilius Syrus (85 BC - 20 AC) was a Poet from Syria.

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