English, asked by aman89119, 1 year ago

All the glitter is not gold write example of human beign (3paragraph​

Answers

Answered by Rajputsaurabhsingh
0

Hey dude here is your Answer------------------------ ✔️✔️

*"All that glitters is not gold" is an aphorism stating that not everything that looks precious or true turns out to be so. This can be applied to just about any experience in life.....

“All that glitters is not gold”, the English proverb is rightly proved in many cases mainly for the human being. A person who looks so beautiful or attractive but having no quality from inner side is the true example of “All that glitters is not gold”......

Answered by SelieVisa
1

Answer:

All that glitters is not gold

The proverb "all that glitters is not gold" teaches us that something which appears beneficial, beautiful and valuable may turn out to be not so. The proverb is believed to have been first used by William Shakespeare in the play "The Merchant of Venice". Not everything that is shiny and beautiful is valuable. Their attractiveness is superficially and of no value.

Gold is a precious metal and is rare. Gold very expensive but a metal which looks like gold may turn out to be worthless. There are many things around us which can deceive us by their beautiful appearance. There are people whose oratory skill and appearance can fool us. This proverb tells us not to be deceived by outward looks. A person may look innocent, truthful and reliable but they may not be who they appear to be. A well dressed person does not mean he or she has a good character and good moral values. It does not mean the person is kind, loving, thoughtful and generous. The value of a person lies in his good virtues and abilities and not his external appearance.

This proverb expresses the wisdom that the attractive external appearance of something or someone is not a reliable indication of its true nature. Appearance can be greatly misleading. Not everything that looks precious are not so and we must be careful not trust everything we see. Therefore, to assume something as precious or valuable on the basis of mere appearance is unwise.

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