If you are the salt of the earth, you are someone who is humble, gracious, and loyal. You have a great work ethic and sense of responsibility, and others look up to you.
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The idiom “fortune favors the bold” is a translation of the Lain proverb audentes fortuna iuvat.
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Many people credit the playwright Terence with the origin of the idiom “fortune favors the strong.” However, Virgil is credited with the more popular version “fortune favors the bold.”
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If you fall for someone “hook, line, and sinker” it means you’ve fallen in love with them completely and without reservation. You are entirely enamored with the person.
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“Hook, line, and sinker” was first used in the mid-nineteenth century and initially referred to the way a fish might consume all of the fishing equipment besides the bait. As an idiom, it means “fall for something without question.”
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Some synonyms and near synonyms for the idiom hook, line, and sinker include:
- Completely
- Utterly
- Through and through
- One hundred percent
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In the seventeenth century, many trades used the width of a thumb as a rough measurement, as it equaled about an inch across on average. As this was a quick rule for measurement, any loose guideline like this became known as a “rule of thumb.”
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Some synonyms and near synonyms for the idiom “rule of thumb” include:
- Guideline
- Golden rule
- Pointer
- Unwritten rule
- Recommendation
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A “pound of flesh” comes from Shakespeare’s play The Merchant of Venice. A debt collector named Shylock requests a pound of flesh from a merchant as payment for treating him poorly. While the demand was hefty, it was fair according to their contract.
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The Merchant of Venice is the play in which Shylock demands a pound of flesh from a merchant. “Pound of flesh” has since become a well-known idiom meaning an unreasonable demand.
Continue reading: Which of Shakespeare’s plays involves a pound of flesh?