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what does all's fair in love and war mean?
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my mom said it the other day but said it's too complicated to explain. Any one want to have a go?
Oh, and also the tongue in cheek thing.
thanks :)
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Im sure someone with a better vocabulary will answer is but Ill try- "All's fair in love and war...." Well, nothing is fair in love and nothing is fair in war...so I think it just means that "life" is not always accomodating to our specif needs. LIFE is not fair, but we gotta keep going anyway. xxcheers
As for 'tongue in cheek'...
It usually means jokingly or insincerely nowadays. When it was first used in written English - by Tobias Smollett in his novel, Roderick Random, published in 1748 - it suggested some stronger emotion. He wrote: "I signified my contempt of him by thrusting my tongue in my cheek."
It can also suggest that one is making an effort not to laugh. The actual form �tongue in cheek' - ie these exact words in that order - did not appear until the 1930s and the hyphenated version �tongue-in-cheek' - not until the 1950s.
It usually means jokingly or insincerely nowadays. When it was first used in written English - by Tobias Smollett in his novel, Roderick Random, published in 1748 - it suggested some stronger emotion. He wrote: "I signified my contempt of him by thrusting my tongue in my cheek."
It can also suggest that one is making an effort not to laugh. The actual form �tongue in cheek' - ie these exact words in that order - did not appear until the 1930s and the hyphenated version �tongue-in-cheek' - not until the 1950s.
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