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The exact origin of the idiom “eat it” is unknown, but some sources suggest that it may have originated from African American Vernacular English (AAVE). The phrase was first recorded in 1975 by musician Frank Zappa in his song titled “Bobby Brown Goes Down.”
But as Keats’s use of this proverb as epigraph suggests, the expression – whether as ‘you cannot eat your cake and have it too’ or ‘you cannot have your cake and eat it’ – was well-established by 1816, when Keats wrote ‘On Fame’. We have to go back further to finds the proverb’s true origins.
You can't have your cake and eat it (too) is a popular English idiomatic proverb or figure of speech. [1] The proverb literally means "you cannot simultaneously retain possession of a cake and eat it, too". Once the cake is eaten, it is gone.
8 mar 2014 · The original version of this phrase (and the one which makes more sense), is "you can't eat your cake and have it too." It refers most specifically to opportunity cost, in that you cannot spend a resource and still hold it reserve; you have to choose one or the other.
"Eat it" is an English idiom. It means "to suffer a fall or mishap, often used humorously." Examples in Sentences. Here are three examples of the idiom "eat it" used in a sentence: He tried to skateboard down the stairs and totally ate it. She was running in the rain and just ate it on the slippery sidewalk.
31 sie 2017 · The words “have cake and eat it” were written on a Brexit memo carried out of No. 10 Downing Street by a government aide and snapped by an eagle-eyed photographer (the same document also contained the words “very French negotiating team”).
14 wrz 2023 · The original British English phrase is “the proof of the pudding is in the eating,” meaning that you don’t know how delicious the pudding is until you have tasted it. You test the pudding’s quality by eating it.