You say "Fool me once, shame on you! Fool me twice, shame on me!"This means, if you play a trick on me and I fall for it, shame on you for fooling me. But if you play a trick on me and I fall for it again, then shame on me for being foolish.
yes
bigger fool
The question is unanswerable because it mangles Shakespeare into something ungrammatical.
The biggest
because he had the throne and he didn't want to give the throne to someone else
because he had the throne and he didn't want to give the throne to someone else
The wisest fool in Christendom, James VI.
James I
The King James Bible No ! It was written in the reign of King James I of England (VI of Scotland) 'the wisest fool in christendom' had nothing to do with its writing, other than its royal sanction.
James the First
The cast of The Wisest Fool - 1919 includes: James Harvey Holland Marcel Perez as Twede-Dan
The "most learned fool in Christendom" was a name given to King James VI and James I. Both are the same person, just given a different title for the countries he ruled. This nickname was given to him by an arch rival, Sir Anthony Weldon.
The ruler of the Delhi Sultanate known as the wisest fool was Feroz Shah Tughlaq. He was known for his administrative reforms and public welfare measures, but his extravagant spending and failed military campaigns earned him the title of the "wisest fool."
Muhammad bin tughlag
Solomon was, until he backslid in his old age. 1Kings 4:30 And Solomon's wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the children of the east country, and all the wisdom of Egypt.
Pyrite is called "fool's gold".