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WINGED WORDS, PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS
Directory / Winged words, phraseological units / What is new is not good, what is good is not new

Winged words, phraseological units. Meaning, history of origin, examples of use

Winged words, phraseological units

Directory / Winged words, phraseological units

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What's new is not good, what's good is not new

Johann Heinrich Voss
Johann Heinrich Voss

Phraseologism: What is new is not good, what is good is not new.

Meaning: Inconsistencies in quality and novelty.

Origin: The primary source is a review-couple of the German philologist and poet Johann Voss (1751-1826) on the work of a certain unlucky author. Published (1792) in the “Almanac of the Muses”: “Your book teaches something new and true. // If only what was true in it were new, and what was new was true.”

Random phraseology:

And turpentine is good for anything!

Meaning:

Quoted as a way to cheer up someone or yourself, they say, nothing, and we'll fit in something else, show ourselves, have our say, etc. (jokingly ironic.)

Origin:

The 60th aphorism from the collection of thoughts and aphorisms "The Fruits of Thought" (1854) by Kozma Prutkov. Turpentine is a resinous sap of coniferous trees, from which turpentine and rosin are obtained by distillation.

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