i mean it yall have to shet up an give me my answer
The phrase give him an inch and he'll take a mile is a very popular phrase. This means that if you give him a little bit of freedom he'll take you for everything you've got.
if you earn a penny and you save it
The proverb is not 'You can get a quart into a pint pot.'It is 'You can't get a quart into a pint pot.' That means - don't waste your time trying to do something that is not possible!
I assume you mean 0.005 of an inch? If so this is 50 10000ths of an inch
It is not an idiom - it means what it seems to mean. This is a very old proverb (already considered old in the 1500's!). It comes from the fact that some people are greedy. If you give them an inch of something, they'll want even more.
Some egyptians are quite greedy, i mean they like FOOD so muchhh. For example if you ask a lebanese for some chips or anything, theyll give you, they would never say no, while for egyptains theyll likely give you once and then the second time u ask theyll say no..
This is not an idiom - it means just what it seems to mean - but is a proverb, or old saying.If you let someone behave poorly, they will behave very poorly. If you let up on a rule ever so slightly, those who usually follow the rule will throw it out all together.Make a small concession and they'll take advantage of you. For example, I told her she could borrow the car for one day and she's been gone a week--give an inch! This expression, in slightly different form, was already a proverb in John Heywood's 1546 collection, "Give him an inch and he'll take an ell," and is so well known it is often shortened (as in the example). The use of mile dates from about 1900.(Proverb) Be generous to someone and the person will demand even more. (Describes someone who will take advantage of you if you are even a little kind to him or her.)"If you let Mark borrow your tools for this weekend, he'll wind up keeping them for years. Give him an inch and he'll take a mile."
This proverb means that if you fail at something, it doesn't matter whether you fail by a little or a lot. ex- If you come second in a race it doesn't matter whether you lose by one inch or by one mile; you still lose.
this proverb means the odd man out.
not sure
Old mothers proverb was that if one of you leave, the other must leave without him
box of birds
peace 98
If you mean by adding more details then I strongly suggest you lease well alone, you may alter the whole meaning of the proverb. My suggestion is to fully understand what the writer is saying. There may be symbolic meanings in the work that need to be understood. Certain phrasings may need to be comprehended, for what was meant when the proverb was written may not mean the same thing today. Who is the proverb talking to and does it apply to you.
i mean it yall have to shet up an give me my answer
Keep yourself humble.