Well you know what. I saw a question that was"Am I a fool" and someone answered that they were. You know what person who said that, you're the fool. And the person who asked me if I'm a fool, I'm not. It is not nice to call people names
the fool that follows the fool
"Fool" and "full" are not homophones.
The third line from the saying "Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me" is "fool me twice, shame on me."
You Can't Fool a Fool - 1946 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved
You say "Fool me once, shame on you! Fool me twice, shame on me!"This means, if you play a trick on me and I fall for it, shame on you for fooling me. But if you play a trick on me and I fall for it again, then shame on me for being foolish.
the fool being followed as he is lettign a fool follow him plus if a fool is following him then he is obviously not going in the right direction shall we say?
English French fool (moron, idiot) imbécile fool (apple fool) fou hope this helps :)
The word 'fool' is both a verb (fool, fools, fooling, fooled) and a noun (fool, fools). Example uses: Verb: It's not good to fool mother nature. Noun: A fool and his money are soon parted.
Tagalog of fool: luku- luko
He felt like a fool.Acting like a fool, he kept asking the girl out despite her rejections. A dunce and a fool are alike.
No Fool Like an Old Fool - 1914 is rated/received certificates of: UK:U
A Fool for You was created in 1955.