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don't count chickens before they hatch
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Alternative forms
- don't count your chickens before the eggs have hatched
- don't count your chickens before they hatch, don't count your chickens before they've hatched
- don't count your chicks before they hatch, don't count your chicks before they're hatched
- don't count your chickens, don't count your chicks (by ellipsis)
Etymology
First attested in English in Thomas Howell's 1570 New Sonnets and Pretty Pamphlets in the couplet "Counte not thy Chickens that vnhatched be, / Waye wordes as winde, till thou finde certaintee", possibly deriving from similar medieval and early modern Latin fables and maxims.
Proverb
don't count your chickens before they're hatched
- One should not depend upon a favorable (and typically overoptimistic) outcome to one's plans until it is certain to occur.
- [1663 (indicated as 1664), [Samuel Butler], “The Second Part of Hudibras. Canto III.”, in Hudibras. The First and Second Parts. […], London: […] John Martyn and Henry Herringman, […], published 1678, →OCLC; republished in A[lfred] R[ayney] Waller, editor, Hudibras: Written in the Time of the Late Wars, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: University Press, 1905, →OCLC, page 175:
- [...] Make Fools believe in their fore-seeing / Of things before they are in Being; / To swallow Gudgeons ere th' are catch'd, / And count their Chickens ere th' are hatch'd, [...]]
Translations
one should not depend upon a favorable outcome to one's plans until it is certain to occur
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See also
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