The proper saying is, "A rolling stone gathers no moss."
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It means someone who does not put down roots and is constantly on the move and comes from the proverb, "A rolling stone gathers no moss."
The saying is " A rolling stone gathers no moss." It means if you keep moving and learning that you don't just sit there becoming a couch potato.
It isn't a poem, it's a proverb.
If a person never stays in one place, he or she never "gathers" or gets attached to things or people. Moss grows on stones which have been on the ground for many years, so a stone which rolls cannot grow moss.
No, it comes from the phrase "A rolling stone gathers no moss", which inspired the name of the band and the song "Like a Rolling Stone" by Bob Dylan, but the magazine was not named after the band.
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A rolling stone gathers no moss
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A rolling stone gathers no moss.
It means someone who does not put down roots and is constantly on the move and comes from the proverb, "A rolling stone gathers no moss."
MythBusters have confirmed that a rolling stone does gather moss. You can go check it out into the Internet by typing into a search engine : mythbusters rolling stone
Er..... I think you mean the old saying "a rolling stone gathers no moss."
"Rolling Stone" comes from the saying, "A rolling stone gathers no moss." A rolling stone personality is that of someone who doesn't allow themselves to become too attached to anyone or anything.
The saying is " A rolling stone gathers no moss." It means if you keep moving and learning that you don't just sit there becoming a couch potato.
A Day with Doodles - 1964 A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss 1-6 was released on: USA: 1 January 1964
A rolling stone gathers no moss.
It isn't a poem, it's a proverb.