"You can't walk in someone else's shoes untill you take off your own shoes ". What do you understand from the above sentence? +no spam answers)
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Answer:
Mary T. Lathrap
The full idiom is: Before you judge a man, walk a mile in his shoes. In effect, it is a reminder to practice empathy. While long credited as a Native American aphorism, replacing the word shoes with moccasins, the saying almost certainly is derived from a Mary T. Lathrap poem published in 1895.
When someone tells me about empathy, this is usually the first image that comes up. It means walking in someone else's shoes
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0
Answer:
1800
Explanation:
- A shoes is an item of footwear .
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