Fūl medammis ("fool" or "ful") is an Egyptian dish of cooked and mashed spiced fava beans.
A fool is also the name of a dessert dish in England. A purée of lightly cooked soft fruit such as Gooseberries mixed with double (heavy) cream and chilled before serving.
the fool that follows the fool
The third line from the saying "Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me" is "fool me twice, shame on me."
You Can't Fool a Fool - 1946 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved
You say "Fool me once, shame on you! Fool me twice, shame on me!"This means, if you play a trick on me and I fall for it, shame on you for fooling me. But if you play a trick on me and I fall for it again, then shame on me for being foolish.
the fool being followed as he is lettign a fool follow him plus if a fool is following him then he is obviously not going in the right direction shall we say?
UNWIZE
English French fool (moron, idiot) imbécile fool (apple fool) fou hope this helps :)
The word 'fool' is both a verb (fool, fools, fooling, fooled) and a noun (fool, fools). Example uses: Verb: It's not good to fool mother nature. Noun: A fool and his money are soon parted.
In Jamaican Patois, the word for "fool" is often expressed as "fool" or "fool fool." It can also be used contextually in phrases like "yuh a fool" to mean "you are a fool." The language incorporates both English words and unique Patois expressions, making it vibrant and rich.
Tagalog of fool: luku- luko
He felt like a fool.Acting like a fool, he kept asking the girl out despite her rejections. A dunce and a fool are alike.
No Fool Like an Old Fool - 1914 is rated/received certificates of: UK:U