'All is fair in love and war' Describe the meaning of this sentence.
Answers
Answer:
Definition of all's fair in love and war:
—used to describe a situation in which people do not follow the usual rules of behavior and do things that are normally considered unfair Sure, it was underhanded to steal his customers, but all's fair in love and war.
Answer:
The proverbial saying 'All's fair in love and war' expresses the idea that, like war, where any strategy is accepted, affairs of the heart are also no-holds-barred contests. So, Yes, everything is actually fair in love and war! Maybe War has standard operating procedures, rules and ethics but when it comes to the individual soldier who is fighting in the battlefield, the war may or may not treat him right. The earliest known origin of the sentiment "all is fair in love in war" is found in poet John Lyly's novel "Euphues: The Anatomy of Wit,"
btw Ron also used this line in the deathly hallows :)