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This isn't an idiom because it means exactly what it seems to mean. It's a saying - you can't live tomorrow yet, so today is more valuable.

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Q: What does the idiom 'one today is worth two tomorrows mean?
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What does one today is worth two tomorrows mean?

don't do tomorrow what you can do today - don't procrastinate


What does this saying mean One today is worth two tomorrows?

don't dotomorrow what you can do today- don't procrastinate


What does this proverb actually mean 'One today is worth two tomorrows'?

It means that you ought to enjoy something you actually have today, instead of dreaming having two times that tomorrow - which is far from sure. In other terms, "one bird in the hand is worth two in the bush"


What does the idiom get his two-bits worth in mean?

It means he gave his opinion on the subject.


Is it Tomorrow's dreams or is it Tomorrows' dreams?

That depends on whether you mean 'The dreams of tomorrow' or 'The dreams of tomorrows', and only you can know that. The former construction is much more likely to be what you mean, but I suppose you could be thinking of something like 'the dreams of all our tomorrows'. Writing it as 'all our tomorrows' dreams' would be technically correct but clumsy and ambiguous and, I think, best avoided.


Is 'without gods man is nothing' an idiom?

An idiom is a phrase that doesn't mean anything unless you know the definition. This sentence makes perfect sense, so it is not an idiom. Without religion, mankind is not worth much.


What does the idiom spice of life mean?

The idiom, "spice of life", means that you can do something to make your life more exciting. Do something that's daring, challenging, fun; something that's worth living for.


What does the idiom something worth crowing for mean?

It's not an idiom because you can figure out the meaning. Roosters crow to show the other chicken's who's the boss, so crowing means you're proud of yourself. Something worth crowing about would be something you deserve to be proud about.


What does the idiom itchy nose mean?

It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.


What does the idiom what you have in mind mean?

It's not really an idiom. It means "what are you thinking about."


RFP responses idiom what does it mean?

RFP is not an idiom. It's an abbreviation.


In English class what does allusion mean?

well an allusion is referring to a person and/or incident in a sentence. So if I said "Tomorrows game could be my waterloo" that would mean that tomorrows game could be the end of me. The reader understands this because they know what happened at waterloo.