Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Some people say, "a good horse doesn't eat grass from the back, and a rabbit doesn't eat grass from the nest." What does that mean? Who can explain it to my younger brother! !

Some people say, "a good horse doesn't eat grass from the back, and a rabbit doesn't eat grass from the nest." What does that mean? Who can explain it to my younger brother! !

"Rabbits don't eat grass beside their nests" means that rabbits don't eat grass beside their nests, and they have self-protection in their hearts and a kind of calmness of "being their own sooner or later". In fact, the rabbit comes out of the nest to eat, and it doesn't care whether it is close to the nest or not. However, when people quote this proverb, they regard it as an extension of "being a good neighbor". Warning people not to do bad things at home. The allusion of "a good horse never eats grass again" is that a good horse walks out of the stable and rushes to the vast grassland, where he can catch a glimpse of delicious tender grass at a glance, so he eats it along the selected route until his stomach is big and round, and he will never chew one bite in the east, one bite in the west and then go back to eat the missed tender grass. In other words, not all the grass behind us is bad, nor all the grass in front of us is good. It's just that a good horse will carefully eat the grass in front of him, so there is no' turning back to the grass'. Many times people just use this sentence to make an excuse for themselves. But it belongs to a neutral proverb, which neither praises nor derogates.