"All that glitters isn't gold."
This is NOT an idiom -- when you hear AS __ AS __ you have A Simile. The correct simile would be "we're all in the same boat," meaning "we have the same circumstances for everyone."
The correct sentence is " All that GLISTERS is not gold" meaning that anything that is showy may not necessarily be valuable
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It's not an idiom. It means exactly what it says. "By all means" or "by any method necessary."
A crap life. Correct answer: A dog's life is without responsibilities. Eating, sleeping, scratching, barking, sniffing and licking. Pretty good, all in all.
Another idiom that means the same thing would be "all at sea."
It's not an idiom. It means just what it says - every generation in the future.
You will need to get the quotation correct in the first place. "All that glisters is not gold" Meaning that not everything that looks precious is so"
It depends on how you use it. If you mean literal colors, then it's not an idiom. If you say something like "It's all there in black and white," then it's an idiom meaning that something is printed.
"All that glisters is not gold" is from Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice (II, vii).Some people use the word "glitters" rather than "glisters" but the latter is the correct word.
doesn't stop blinking until you turn the wheel and the make the tires straight again
There is no correct name. They are all goldfish. Whatever "Fancy Name" you wish to give it is up to you.