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El muerto...An idiom is an expression whose meaning is not readily apparent based on the individual words in the expression. This forum is dedicated to discussing idioms and other sayings. |
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#3
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I have no idea how to finish your expression. I only know the traditional one.
About "el muerto..." it means that even if somebody dies, those who stay alive keep on enjoying life.
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Take care, María José ![]() ![]() |
#4
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Quote:
And the answer is:Where there's a will there's a relative. |
#5
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Quote:
Lo muerto, muerto está. Lo pasado, pasado está. Life goes on. Let bygones be bygones. Let sleeping dogs lie. Let the dead bury their dead. Last edited by Rusty; May 29, 2008 at 10:27 PM. |
#6
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I think life goes on and let the dead bury their dead are very good translations.
But I always thought that to let sleeping dogs lie meant you shoudn't bring up things from the past that are better forgotten ( as in Agatha Christie's book of the same title)
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Take care, María José ![]() ![]() |
#7
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Agreed. That is certainly a meaning of let sleeping dogs lie.
Simply stated, it means allow inactive problems to remain so. This means, to me at least, that even though a problem may have happened, it can remain a problem of the past and there is no need to rehash it. Certainly, some problems may fall into the best forgotten category, as you said. Other troubling events, like the death of someone, can be remembered our whole lives through. However, even though we remember them, we can choose not to let them upset (ruin) the present. This is what I had in mind when I added the old proverb to the list. We generally say let sleeping dogs lie whenever we discover that someone can't leave a problem in the past (including the death of someone). But, like you, I agree that something less harsh sounding, like life goes on, is a better thing to say in this case. |
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bollo, gozo, hoyo, muerto, pozo |
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