That actually isn't the full quote. Here it is: "A life of leisure and a life of laziness are two things. There will be sleeping enough in the grave." - Benjamin Franklin It means that now is not a time to be lazy. You can rest when you're dead.
No because he was smart enough to do it by him self
enough/meets requirement
In time for the Lightning rod, sorry about the joke but Ben has enough laurels without making exaggerated claims, like the sleeping habits of our First President. As if a career as a printer, man of letters, political type, and inventor were not enough. Hospitals may have been named in his honor, but Franklin was not in any sense a medical practitioner. Benjamin Rush, a contemporary, was and he was also a pre-freudian psychiatrist- No he did not found the Political asylum! sorry about the jokes but Old Ben did not establish hospitals. Libraries, yes, Fire Brigades, yes, but let us draw the lightining rod!
He smelled the but to figure out how smelly it was.
There aren't enough historical records to reveal whether Ben Franklin was patient or not, but he probably had to be to invent so many things.
"A life of leisure and a life of laziness are two different things. The quote 'There will be sleeping enough in the grave' is from the 18th century poet Benjamin Franklin, emphasizing the importance of using time wisely while alive."
This quote from Benjamin Franklin pretty much means 'there's no time to be lazy, you can sleep when you're dead'.
That depends on the sleeping bag itself. Any sleeping bag that is made for camping in un-harsh conditions would not keep you warm enough in mountain areas.
Old enough for me to have his dick
a lot... enough said
Because she was too beautiful and NOT ugly enough.
Not sleeping does not make you shorter, it can affect your health though. Not getting enough sleep or none at all can cause lots of problems.
Benjamin Franklin was brave enough to put a magnetic key on a kite to test the electric shocks on a stormy day.
No sleeping a lot or not enough doesn't make you shorter
No because he was smart enough to do it by him self
Not famous enough that I've ever heard of him.
satis (meaning "enough") and facio (meaning "to make" - i.e. 'satisfaction' loosely means 'making enough / having enough'