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Katherine
Japanese- Have your cake and eat it too.
Is there a way to say "to have your cake and eat it too," a common English idiom meaning "you can't have it both ways" in Japanese?
Nov 20, 2012 8:25 PM
Answers · 4
虻蜂取らず(あぶはちとらず)= 虻も取れず、蜂も取れない
虻あぶ a horsefly 蜂はち a bee
First of all there are a horsefly and a bee on a spider's web.
Then a spider went toward a horsefly, but it changed it's mind on the way, so it turn to a bee.
After all a spider did not catch both of them.
Do you understand my explanation in this English? Please correct if possible.
November 21, 2012
「東に近ければ、西に遠し」 あるいは、「二兎を追う者は、一兎をも得ず」も該当するのでは?!
January 19, 2013
「一得一失」? or「一挙両得とはいかない」?
(It's a bit different from 「二兎を追うものは一兎をも得ず」.)
November 20, 2012
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Katherine
Language Skills
English, French, Japanese, Korean
Learning Language
French, Japanese, Korean
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