English, asked by Suchikamahendra, 3 months ago

Neither a borrower nor a lender be;
For loan oft loses both itself and friend.

Answers

Answered by Shaikhube9gmailcom
0

Answer:

please tell in Marathi

Explanation:

please tell in Marathi

Answered by aseesk53
0

Answer:

This is a famous phrase said by Polonius in Act-I, Scene-III of William Shakespeare’s play, Hamlet. The character Polonius counsels his son Laertes before he embarks on his visit to Paris. He says, “Neither a borrower nor a lender be; / For loan oft loses both itself and friend.” It means do not lend or borrow money from a friend, because if you do so, you will lose both your friend and your money. If you lend, he will avoid paying back, and if you borrow you will fall out of your savings, as you turn into a spendthrift, and face humiliation.

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