"Four legs good, two legs bad" is a slogan used by animals such as sheep in George Orwell Animal Farm. The "two legs" in the slogan refers to the humans.
Squealer teaches the sheep to chant, "For legs good, two legs bad", because they are too ignorant to learn all of the commandments. He then changes this chant to, "Four legs good, two legs better" after the pigs begin to march out of the farmhouse on two legs portraying the humans they once overthrew towards the end of the novel.
"Four legs good two legs bad!" which was bleated by the sheep but this was later changed to "Four legs good, Two legs better!"
Two legs bad, Four legs good. The sheep are the ones in the book who would repeat this for hours.
for some animals for instance sheep it was hard to memorize 7 commandments so snowball made new and easier one "Four legs bad, two legs good".
If snowball was at a crucial moment in one of his speeches, The sheep would say "Four legs good, Two legs bad", this would take the other animals attention away from snowball and the point he was trying to make. bob: So to put into simpler words, bacon is unhealthy because-- John: FOUR LEGS GOOD, TWO LEGS BAD bob:....... John: HAHAHAHAHA YOU SUCK
The sheep would bleat out "Four legs good, two legs bad!" over and over again because they were supporting Napoleon, and they were against Snowball.
o animal shall drink alcohol. No animal shall sleep in a bed. Four legs good, two legs bad. A group of sheep recited that and then started chanting there after
"All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.
Animal farm
Snowball
" I will work harder" "Napoleon is always right" "Four legs good two legs bad" ( later changed to "Four legs good two legs better"
In the novel "Animal Farm," Orwell has the character Napoleon explain the principles of animalism to the animals on the farm. He shortens the philosophy to the idea of "four legs good, two legs bad."