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It is a good horse which never stumbles?

i thought it just referred to a good horse. but my teacher said, this sentence means no horse is good enough that it never falls? what on earth?

Asked by Little G on 18:09, 14/10/2008 - 149 views
Learn English , using English      Tags: Advance proverb saying Writing
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I don't see any horse in this sentence.

It's a proverb/methaphor:
To be good at something you have to try new things. Sometimes you will fail and 'stumble'. Without trial (and sometimes) failure there can't be any experience. It's impossible to become a 'good horse' if you didn't stumble.
2 months ago
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