Under The Lights
ORDER NOW
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
hate to be a corrector but it's "hoist with one's own petard"...a petard was a small bomb used for blowing up gates and walls when breaching fortifications (dating back to 1500s) and to be hoist with it implies being blown into the air with your own bomb. More generally it's an expression denoting being injured by the device that you intended to use to injure others.Hung by his own petard
I guess you could configure 'failure of a Judas' to mean a good thing...This failure of a Judas will not be missed.
Good, let's have more Shakespeare for this thread. I'll continue with this one from Macbeth: "Unreal mockery, hence!"But your allusion (via this thread's title) to Shakespeare's 'inventing' the phrase is noted. He used it in Hamlet (1602) :
"For tis the sport to have the enginer Hoist with his owne petar".
Dont EVER leave Deip !!! lollollolhate to be a corrector but it's "hoist with one's own petard"...a petard was a small bomb used for blowing up gates and walls when breaching fortifications (dating back to 1500s) and to be hoist with it implies being blown into the air with your own bomb. More generally it's an expression denoting being injured by the device that you intended to use to injure others.
But your allusion (via this thread's title) to Shakespeare's 'inventing' the phrase is noted. He used it in Hamlet (1602) :
"For tis the sport to have the enginer Hoist with his owne petar".
Note: engineers were originally constructors of military engines.
hate to be a corrector but it's "hoist with one's own petard"...a petard was a small bomb used for blowing up gates and walls when breaching fortifications (dating back to 1500s) and to be hoist with it implies being blown into the air with your own bomb. More generally it's an expression denoting being injured by the device that you intended to use to injure others.
But your allusion (via this thread's title) to Shakespeare's 'inventing' the phrase is noted. He used it in Hamlet (1602) :
"For tis the sport to have the enginer Hoist with his owne petar".
Note: engineers were originally constructors of military engines.
Don’t jinx it!! Imagine he was announced as the new manager100% win record...and 100% away in European competitions. You will be missed Craig, our greatest ever manager.
Should have stabbed Allardyce in the back and taken over...Et tu, Bisto!!
Does anyone know what this guy does except pick up a wage?