no fool like an old fool, there's



no fool like an old fool, there's

An old fool is the worst kind of fool, as in He's marrying a woman fifty years his junior-there's no fool like an old fool. This adage, now considered somewhat offensive for stereotyping old people, appeared in John Heywood's 1546 proverb collection and has been repeated ever since.
See also: fool, like, old

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Plamen-Bulgarian, Serbian
Candelariokahn-de-LAH-ryoSpanish
Placide-French
Armand['a:mɔnd]
MeridithMER-ə-dithEnglish (Rare)
LÝDie-Czech