eaten bread is soon forgotten
Appearance
English
[edit]Proverb
[edit]- (Ireland) Kind deeds or favors are often forgotten by the beneficiary once they have been done.
- 2008 July 6, Ciara Kelly, “We're paying the price of union power”, in Irish Independent:
- Promised increases in productivity following previous pay rises never materialised -- as eaten bread is soon forgotten -- but we'll be paying for the crumbs for a long time to come.
- 2011 August 13, Mary Sullivan, “We must live on less, but can our TDs?”, in Irish Independent:
- Eaten bread is soon forgotten, as we do seem to quickly forget the immense funding we did receive from the EEC and then the EU over 30 years, culminating in almost IR£1bn in the late 1990s, under Albert Reynolds's time as Taoiseach.
- 2012 February 27, Noreen Flynn, “Further pay cuts for teachers”, in The Irish Times:
- It is obvious that eaten bread is soon forgotten by anyone asking teachers to take another one for the team.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- Patrick Weston Joyce, English as We Speak It in Ireland, Chapter VIII