As Just As Fair
As Just As Fair. “took the other, as just as fair” means that this road that i took is just as nice as the other one. Many times, actions that are just are not fair.
Due a fair share : “fair and just” is common as an idiom, but we typically don’t use it all that much in practice. It's not ungrammatical, but it doesn't mean the same thing.
“Fair And Just” Is Common As An Idiom, But We Typically Don’t Use It All That Much In Practice.
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, and sorry i could not travel both. Oh, i kept the first for another day! “took the other, as just as fair” means that this road that i took is just as nice as the other one.
Due A Fair Share :
Conforming with the established rules : It means that both the roads are looking good enough. He’s deciding which one to take.
The Word “Fair” Comes At The Beginning Of The Second Stanza Of “ The Road Not Taken.”.
Oh, i kept the first for another day! To answer the original question: Thomas responds shortly thereafter in a letter now evidently lost but referred to in later correspondence, calling the poem “staggering” but missing frost’s intention.
And Looked Down One As Far As I Could.
Though as for that the passing there had worn them really about the same, what it means: 22 hours agoanna moneymaker/getty images. Though as for that the passing there had worn them really about the same, and both that morning equally lay in leaves no step had trodden black.
(Keith Has It Included In His Answer, But This Is The Definition By Itself.)
It's not ungrammatical, but it doesn't mean the same thing. He decides on “the other,” which is described as just as “fair” and as “grassy and wanting wear.” He cannot take both, so he looks down one as far as he can to where it “ben[ds] in the undergrowth,” hoping to determine which road might be better to take.
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