katzefrau wrote:
mysassyself wrote:
LOL
I never understood 'can't have your cake and eat it too', either
Or, the one about 'a bird in the hand'
"a bird in the hand beats two in the bush" .. i'm guessing: one thing you have is better than two things you don't have, or similar
mysassyself wrote:
But, most of all, what on earth does 'never look a gift horse in the mouth' mean ?? What in heck is a gift horse ????
someone explained this to me once. something about horses having bad teeth. i think it means if someone gives you something you should appreciate it instead of finding its flaws. so a "gift horse" is a horse someone has given you as a gift.
never heard "circle the wagons"
and "pay it forward" despite having heard people use it, i still don't understand.
dang - i'm gonna look these up.
don't look a gift horse in the mouth < also there's a good phrase dictionary
"a bird in the hand ..""circle the wagons""pay it forward"
That makes sense, though it still doesn't of course explain what a gift horse is, or more precisely, why on earth anyone would refer to it as such, or consider it a complementary item, seeing as horses are so expensive to keep.
I did wonder whether it was related to that tale of the trojan horse, actually, but I guess not.
Good explanation about the birds, btw.
I'm guessing also that 'What's up?' relates to 'What's happy?', meaning that when someone asks you what's up it means what's good for you right now ~ or, what's the most relevant issue; it could mean that as well I guess.
_________________
.. one day
in murky water mild,
where Wednesday lay
A Thursday child ..