Look at your eyes without using a fooking mirror
The phrase "a wolf in sheep's clothing" comes from Aesop's fables, particularly the story of "The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing." It refers to someone who appears harmless or innocent but is actually a danger or threat. The moral of the story is to not be deceived by appearances.
This mean someone is pretending to have good intentions, but in fact, it's just the opposite.
He's getting very rich through his television 'ministry'. What more do you need to know?
The phrase comes from Aesop and one of his fables. The fable talks about a wolf who stumbles upon a fleece and does what you would expect: use it to try to sneak up on sheep. In the fable, though, the moral of the story comes about when the wolf, mistaken for a sheep, comes to a bad end--done in by his own deceit.Our use of the term doesn't look upon the moral but upon the action: disguising oneself to sneak up on someone undetected.
The problem of the three little pigs is that they all build their own houses but they have to face the wolf. Unfortunately the two pigs died and the wolf blew their houses away except the third one. The third house was made by brick which the wolf cannot blow.
The phrase "a wolf in sheep's clothing" comes from Aesop's fables, particularly the story of "The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing." It refers to someone who appears harmless or innocent but is actually a danger or threat. The moral of the story is to not be deceived by appearances.
Rufus says "Tear the sheep's clothing off the Red Wolf." Who could the Red Wolf be?
It is from a short story by Aesop. The summary of the story is that a wolf wanted to get at the sheep but because of the vigilance of the shepherd and his dogs. One day it found the skin of a sheep that had been flayed and thrown aside, so it put it on over its own pelt so it could blend in and not get caught. The lamb that belonged to the sheep, whose skin the wolf was wearing, began to follow the wolf in the sheep's clothing. Managing to lead the Lamb a little apart, he soon made a meal off her. The wolf continued to succeed in deceiving the sheep, and enjoyed hearty meals. The moral of the story (and the meaning of the idiom) is that looks can be deceptive.
This mean someone is pretending to have good intentions, but in fact, it's just the opposite.
He's getting very rich through his television 'ministry'. What more do you need to know?
Man is a moral being.The moral of the story The Boy Who Cried Wolf is don't lie.
The moral of the story "The Boy Who Cried Wolf" is that if you lie repeatedly, people will not believe you even when you are telling the truth. It teaches the importance of honesty and the consequences of deception.
The phrase comes from Aesop and one of his fables. The fable talks about a wolf who stumbles upon a fleece and does what you would expect: use it to try to sneak up on sheep. In the fable, though, the moral of the story comes about when the wolf, mistaken for a sheep, comes to a bad end--done in by his own deceit.Our use of the term doesn't look upon the moral but upon the action: disguising oneself to sneak up on someone undetected.
The moral of "the wolf in sheep's clothing" fable is that appearances can be deceiving. It teaches us to be cautious of those who pretend to be something they are not, as they may have ulterior motives. Trusting solely in outward appearances can lead to negative consequences.
moral lesson of hungry wolf
Wolf's Clothing was created in 1936.
Watch out for someone who looks harmless but is in fact dangerous.The story referred to is one of Aesop's fables, where a wolf, unable to get at a flock of sheep, disguised himself using an old sheepskin. In this disguise he was able to penetrate the flock and deceive a young lamb, who he persuaded to go with him to a place apart. The wolf was then able to eat the lamb.Someone/something that looks harmless but is dangerous.