This moral suggests that living a simple and humble life, free from unnecessary luxuries and dangers, is preferable to a lavish lifestyle that comes with risks and potential harm. It emphasizes the value of peace, contentment, and safety over material wealth or excitement.
The comparative form of "humble" is "more humble," and the superlative form is "most humble."
The possessive form of "humble" is "humble's."
No, humble is not a noun; the word humble is an adjective(humble, humbler, humblest) and a verb (humble, humbles, humbling, humbled).
The comparative adjective for humble is "more humble."
The noun for humble is humility.
The word humble is an adjective and a verb:The adjective humble, describes a noun as 'modest; not proud or showy; of low rank or important'.The verb humble, meaning 'to completely defeat someone who seemed better orstronger than you'.
It can be (a humble servant). It can also be a verb meaning to lower in status.
modest; humble
It has a roughly similar meaning to these other proverbs... "better a live coward than a dead hero" or "Discretion is the better part of valour" or "Run a way and live to fight another day."
A homonym is the same as a homophone. It is a word that is pronounced the same as another word but with a different meaning and spelling. There is no English homophone for the word 'humble.'
it means somebody who is humble.
not proud
of Humble
This is not an idiom. It means just what it says: whatever has happened will make you more humble.
humble,honest and straight forward
Vineeta means Knowledge/ Humble
The root word for "humbly" is "humble," which comes from the Latin word "humilis," meaning low or lowly.