"When the horse is dead, get off" means you should not waste time on things that are not worth it. If the horse is dead, you can't ride it any more.
Means nothing but a dead bird. I suggest that something ate the head or it fell off.
for a start i hope you mean 'called'. and a male horse is called either a stallion if it has not been castrated (bits chopped off) or a colt which is a younger stallion or a gelding if it has been castrated.
The falling off would most likely be attributed to the fact that they did not have saddles on the horse and also to poor riding form. If you are not balanced on the horse you will fall off a lot.
Riding a horse can be compared to riding a bike. if you do not have balance, you can throw the horse (or bike) off balance and/or slide off to one side.
I'm not entirely sure what the meaning of your question is, but if you mean getting on and off a horse, that's called mounting and dismounting. If you mean when you stand up and sit down when trotting, that's called rising trot. I can't think what else you mean.
"If the horse is dead, get off it".
"if the horse is dead, get off it"
If someone is having a hard time don't make it worse for them.
Yes, it is a proverb written idiomatically. This is an expression of wisdom saying to get up and move on with your life when you fall. An idiom at the same time because the construction of the phrase is something that is not commonly used in our common conversation.
If you mean dismountaining a horse it basically means you get off of it's back.
Riddle: Come to me not dressed and not naked; not on the road and not off the road; not on a horse and not off a horse. Answer: Take off your clothes and wrap yourself in a fishnet, tie the fishnet to the horse's bridle and let the horse gallop to the person so that only your big toes touch the ground.
If you mean: "Who sang the song called One Way Love (Better Off Dead)?" Then it was E.G. Daily.
do not bother doing what won't have a good outcome. let it go. or stop doing something that is no longer serving your purpose. my personal example - a relationship that is no longer making you happy.
because he fell of a horse Don't you mean 'fell OFF a horse'. Which he didn't anyway.
That all depends on what you mean by "start off with." Are you asking about training a horse, caring for a horse, or something different entirely? If the latter, please be more specific when asking these types of questions.
It means you fell off your horse but it was because he bucked, reared, crow hopped, ect. not because of you just losing your balance and falling, ect.
That he likes to ride horses?