Who said fools seldom differ
The problem with this sometimes, is that the meanings of different phrases get switched around, losing the original meaning. Often times, the phrases we use have the exact opposite meaning than we think it does. Here are 4 phrases that have been terribly misquoted. Blood is thicker than water is a phrase that we use to justify choosing family bonds over the bonds that we have made by choice. Blood is thicker than water.
The meaning of this saying is actually the opposite of the way we use it. We use this phrase to discourage people from loving money. A phrase used when one has the same thought or idea as someone else. Great minds! In English grammar, a proverb is a type of substitution in which a verb or verb phrase such as do or do so takes the place of another verb, usually to avoid repetition.
Brainstorm about some problems or worries you were able to overcome. Write these down along with how you were able to overcome them. For example, in which case, 1 or 2 one should say fools never differ : 1 I buy a certain pair of shoes and my friend buys the same one in another shop, and then when we meet I could say "Fools never differ"?
Thank you in advance Good bye. Nymeria Senior Member Barbados. Actually, as far as I know, the phrase is "fools seldom differ". It comes from the saying, "Great minds think alike, but fools seldom differ. It basically means that both these people could be equally brilliant, hence the similarity in their brilliant ideas great minds think alike.
Before they get all carried away though, the saying goes on to remind them that a possible explanation is that they are both equally stupid fools seldom differ. Thus, concurring with a person's view could indicate that you two are both wonderfully brilliant, or incurably stupid. Hi, So it is not in the case of immitating one another, but something that occurs spontaneously, right? This is a humorous expression that is used when you found out someone else was thinking about the same thing as you were.
If you say, "Great minds think alike," you say, jokingly, that you and someone else must be very intelligent or great because both of you thought of the same thing or agree on something. According to "A Dictionary of Catch Phrases" by Eric Partridge, the expression " great minds think alike " does not appear to have a specific origin:.
The saying does not appear in the dictionaries of quotations, nor in those of proverbs. It seems to have aside c. Any remark , especially a trivial one, that could be answered by" I happened to think the same" could be capped with 'great minds think alike", a sentence that has become so embedded in ordinary everyday English that on 7 Oct. Also according to Ngram the expression is from the late 19th century. Henry IV. I am your King, you are French Men, and there's the Enemy.
We read in Livy , that Camillus the Dictator had a saying to the same Purpose. Hostem, an me, an vos, ignoratis?
Know ye not who the Enemy is, who I am, and who you are yourselves? Great Minds often think alike on the same Occasions, and we are not always to suppose, that such Thoughts are borrow'd from one another when exprest by Persons of the same heroick Sentiments. They carry Conviction along with them, compel our Judgement, stir our Passions, and leave a Sting behind them in the Soul.
A number of nineteenth-century authors expressed the proverb in its familiar shorter form, decades before the origin date suggested by Eric Partridge, as cited in user's answer.
Greville Ewing, of Glasgow, had a work on theology ready for the press when Professor Dwight's of America, was issued, and so similar were its views and language to the manuscript of Mr. Ewing that the latter had to renounce the publication of his, although it had cost him many years of mental and physical toil.
This shows that minds similarly constituted, in the examination of like subjects, arrive at the same, or nearly the same conclusions—although they may be separated like these two eminent men, by the broad ocean. Did Scott write that, Annie? Great minds think alike ; and I dare say Scott and Shakespeare both had this idea. From " Judge Law and Jeff. I hope you will call the attention of his friends to the policy of circulating large numbers of this speech to aid in his election, and to assuage the asperities of this cruel and barbarous war against the poor rebels.
In the meantime I take the liberty of asking you to print a passage from it, in parallel column, with a passage from Jeff.
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