The fools
it is worth about $9,261,264,914
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No fools.
Atlantis is a poem by W. H. Auden. It details a voyage on a Ship of Fools to the fabled but perhaps attainable paradise of Atlantis. The poem can be viewed as a metaphor for life and how the journey may be more important than the destination.
It is a truism. Some wise men are forced to learn by their own mistakes, since they do occasionally do things that have never been done before.
bunch of fools
A person who always fools others could be referred to as a trickster or a prankster.
This idiom's meaning is when someone has been a fool for a long time, they are the most foolish because they haven't learned better. A way to rephrase its meaning is.. "The longer a person's been a fool, the more foolish they are."
Not a HolidayApril Fools Day is not an actual holiday. It is just a day that people play harmless pranks on others.
in this case, the word suffer means allow to exist
takla
in France people stick fake fish on each others backs
The phrase "don't play fools lightly" suggests that one should not underestimate or take advantage of people who may seem foolish. It implies that those who appear naive or simple-minded might possess deeper wisdom or insight than they let on. The warning serves to encourage caution and respect in dealings with others, as appearances can be deceiving.
The phrase 'Ship of fools' characterises a group of oblivous or deranged passengers aboard a ship unaware of the fact there there is no captain. It was first used in 1494 by Sebastian Brant as the title of his book.
No we are not fools
The fools