Usually used to inspire early rising or promptness in initiating projects, it means an early start will improve the liklihood of success.
OTOH,
1) who wants to eat worms?
2) But...the second mouse gets the cheese!!!
It means that the one who gets somewhere early gets the better things
you snooze, you lose
The second mouse gets the cheese.
The early bird catches the worm.
The bird's body digests it, and it serves to nourish the bird.
A bird is a warm blooded animal.no they are warm blooded
"Pebble worm" is the original translation from Greek of the word for "crocodile."
When an animal kills another animal, the animal that kills that animal is called the predator, while the eaten is called the prey. Let's use a bird and a worm for example, the bird is the predator because it eats the worm, and the worm is the prey because it gets eaten.
the early bird catches the worm
The early bird catches the worm.
Is known as the "early" kind, and this is thought to be good. Funny, that bird typically catches the "early" worm, so one wonders how great being early can be.
the early bird catches the WORM
Yes, as in "The early bird catches the worm".
Ben Franklin
hi mom my teacher told me that if i get up early i would catch the worm.
January... The early bird catches the worm
Yes. "The early bird catches the worm." It can also be an adverb. "The bus arrived early."
早起的鸟儿有虫吃。
The phrase "the early bird catches the worm" is usually a motivational phrase, used to tell someone to get up and do something sooner rather than later. The phrase implies that the one who does the action sooner has their work pay off, as opposed to the one who starts later and gets none.
The early bird catches the worm.