丹尼尔 发表于 2022-4-4 06:45

Once bitten twice shy

本帖最后由 丹尼尔 于 2022-4-4 06:47 编辑

The proverb 'once bitten, twice shy' suggests that, when someone is hurt doing something, they are wary of doing it again for fear of being hurt a second time.

It is frequently used to describe the feelings of someone who has been hurt by a failed romance.



What's the origin of the phrase 'Once bitten, twice shy'?
This expression is somewhat similar to another proverb - 'don't throw good money after bad'. Both proverbs put forward the idea that, 'after something you do works out badly, don't do the same thing again'.

Once bitten, twice shyThe expression is English and first began to be used around the turn of the 19th century. At that time the term 'bite' was used to describe any unpleasant experience.

The proverb is almost coined in this extract from Eliza Fowler Haywood's novel The History of Miss Betsy Thoughtless, 1751:

I have been bit once, and have made a vow never to settle upon any woman while I live, again.


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