In a huge wooden horse.
It was not made in the Iliad. The wooden horse (now known as the Trojan horse) was made after the events of the Iliad, in order to fool the Trojans into letting Greek troops into their city, unbeknownst to the Trojans. These Greek soldiers would then open the gates to the city, letting in the awaiting Greek army.
The main fact was that Troy, was invaded by a Trojan Horse, a big giant wooden horse that held the Myrmidin and Achilles, thus letting in the Greeks who slaughtered the Trokans in open-combat.Another theory is that Troy had an earthquake, causing the walls to collapse which let in thousands of Greeks, and Troy's destruction.I hope this answers better than:"with th Trojan horse" the fool who wrote that.According to legend, a group got in in the belly of a giant wooden horse, and then opened the gates to those waiting outside.
Damon Troy re-did it a few years ago
the fool that follows the fool
Checkmate is where your opponent can neither counter or evade capture - checkmate .
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