horse of a different color, a



horse of a different color, a

Also, a horse of another color. Another matter entirely, something else. For example, I thought that was her boyfriend but it turned out to be her brother-that's a horse of a different color . This term probably derives from a phrase coined by Shakespeare, who wrote "a horse of that color" ( Twelfth Night, 2:3), meaning "the same matter" rather than a different one. By the mid-1800s the term was used to point out difference rather than likeness.
See also: different, horse, of

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Ubon-Thai
'El'azar-Biblical Hebrew
VilhelmVEEL-helm (Finnish)Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Finnish, Hungarian
Araceliah-rah-THE-lee (Spanish), ah-rah-SE-lee (Latin American Spanish)Spanish
Marin-French, Romanian, Croatian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Macedonian
VÍ&Eth;Arr-Norse Mythology