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117:, concerns some fish thrown live into a frying pan of boiling fat. One of them urges its fellows to save their lives by jumping out, but when they do so they fall into the burning coals and curse its bad advice. The fabulist concludes: 'This fable warns us that when we are avoiding present dangers, we should not fall into even worse peril.'
132:, in whose fable "Worse and Worse" the fish jump 'Out of the Frying-Pan, into the Fire' by a collective decision. The moral it illustrates is drawn from a contemporary episode in Polish politics. Another political interpretation was given in 1898 by a cartoon in the American magazine
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is used to describe the situation of moving or getting from a bad or difficult situation to a worse one, often as the result of trying to escape from the bad or difficult one. It was the subject of a 15th-century fable that eventually entered the
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The proverb and several similar
European proverbs ultimately derive from a Greek saying about running from the smoke or the fire into the flame, the first recorded use of which was in a poem by Germanicus Caesar (15 BCE – 19 CE) in the
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409:(8 ed.). United Kingdom: A. Bettesworth, C. Hitch, G. Strahan, R. Gosling, R. Ware, J. Osborn, S. Birt, B. Motte, C. Bathurst, D. Browne, and J. Hodges. p. 288.
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90:(1532) More asserted that his adversary 'featly conuayed himself out of the frying panne fayre into the fyre'.
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from the following century onwards but the first person to adapt it into
English was
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from a dog that attempts to escape by jumping into the sea, only to be seized by a
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Fables of Aesop and Other
Eminent Mythologists: Abstemius's Fables
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in 1692. He was followed shortly after by the anonymous author of
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Aesop (1783) . L'Estrange, Roger; van
Baarland, Adriaan (eds.).
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is another example. A previous instance of such adaptation was
138:, urging American intervention in Cuba on the eve of the
109:, who had done much the same to the proverb about
74:'He runs on Scylla, wishing to avoid Charybdis' (
120:The tale was included in Latin collections of
115:De piscibus e sartigine in prunas desilentibus
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53:urging American intervention in Cuba in 1898
16:Phrase originating from a 15th-century fable
303:, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, 1895
76:incidit in scyllam cupiens vitare charybdim
361:A Hog on Ice and other Curious Expressions
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97:wrote a collection of 100 fables, the
206:"Out of the frying pan into the fire"
177:"Out of the frying pan into the fire"
82:in the course of a pamphlet war with
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88:The Confutacyon of Tyndales Answere
24:out of the frying pan into the fire
440:. United Kingdom. pp. 27–29.
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35:History of the idiom and its use
447:from the original on 2020-09-23
416:from the original on 2020-09-23
385:from the original on 2016-08-18
274:from the original on 2016-06-21
216:from the original on 2018-11-05
187:from the original on 2018-09-18
70:. The Latin equivalent was the
472:Fables by Laurentius Abstemius
293:Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
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152:Lesser of two evils principle
157:Between Scylla and Charybdis
373:Gibbs, Laura (2008-01-26).
62:. There it is applied to a
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434:Pittis, William (1708).
482:English-language idioms
113:. Abstemius' fable 20,
363:, New York 1985, p. 56
111:The Mountain in Labour
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245:on September 23, 2020
210:TheFreeDictionary.com
181:Campbridge Dictionary
103:still waters run deep
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140:Spanish–American War
95:Laurentius Abstemius
239:Lexico Dictionaries
93:The Italian author
357:Charles Earle Funk
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243:the original
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220:2020-09-23
191:2020-09-23
163:References
320:W.R.Paton
318:, trans.
68:'sea-dog'
442:Archived
411:Archived
383:Archived
342:Archived
297:Archived
272:Archived
214:Archived
212:. 2015.
185:Archived
146:See also
107:Phaedrus
379:Aesopus
477:Fables
21:phrase
445:(PDF)
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339:p. 72
86:. In
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135:Puck
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.