This expression refers to the Trojan horse statue that was a gift by the Greek army filled with Greek soldiers to the Trojan army. The Trojans celebrated, what they thought to be their victory and as they fell asleep, the greek soldiers emerged and slaughtered them. If you looked this gift horse in the mouth, you would have found several hiding Greek soldiers.
i dont think there is a horse breed calledZiti anywhere??
no haflingers dont come from italy they come from Austra as a driving horse
It comes from the generally unsanitary nature of horse's mouths and laws against bestiality.The phrase "don't look a gift horse in the mouth" comes from the practice of judging a horse's age and general condition from the condition of its teeth. In other words, "you just got something free, don't go trying to find fault with it."
The horse is supposed to come to the gate so that you dont have to go into the feald
Something like this: the value of a horse is related it its age - i.e., a younger horse is more valuable than an older horse. You can determine the relative age of a horse by inspecting its teeth. Back in the day, a horse was commonly given as a gift. If a man received a horse as a gift, and then inspected inside its mouth, he was trying to assess the value of the gift he received. So, the saying means that you should not assess the value of any gift that you receive; rather you should be thankful for the thoughtfulness of the gift-giver
well they dont actually come to you you have to by them at the shop or win them in objectives
If your horse starts quidding, you must get a vet to come and check it out..the horse may have a painful throat/mouth/teeth.
shut your mouth do your work and rerad dont come to this websitwe it is horrible.
It is a 19th Century expression that comes from the barnyard. As a horse gets older, its gums move back and the teeth appear longer. This expression was eventually passed on to humans!
horse radish i dont think it is horse raddish. i always thought it was horse raddish but if you research horse raddish. malunggay doesnt even come close to what horse raddish looks like. I would say its moringa.
eventually every milk tooth in your mouth is suppost to come out , just let it fall out naturally n dont worry =)
the saying "horse feathers" come from a Clydesdale or any horse with "feathers" on its legs There are no such things as horse feathers. Saying something is horse feathers is the same as saying that it is nonsense. um, YA THERE are they are hairs on a Clydesdale's legs.