The phrase "the early bird catches the worm" is usually a motivational phrase, used to tell someone to get up and do something sooner rather than later. The phrase implies that the one who does the action sooner has their work pay off, as opposed to the one who starts later and gets none.
It means that those with initiative will succeed; those who linger and procrastinate will not.
The early bird catches the worm.
the early bird catches the worm
The answer to this gibberish is "bird catches worm."
the early bird catches the WORM
Is known as the "early" kind, and this is thought to be good. Funny, that bird typically catches the "early" worm, so one wonders how great being early can be.
早起的鸟儿有虫吃。
Ben Franklin
Yes, as in "The early bird catches the worm".
January... The early bird catches the worm
hi mom my teacher told me that if i get up early i would catch the worm.
Yes. "The early bird catches the worm." It can also be an adverb. "The bus arrived early."