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  1. a saying that means someone will have an advantage if they do something immediately, or before other people do it: This is still a nation that believes the early bird catches the worm. Everything comes to those who wait. Or the early bird catches the worm.

  2. You say the early bird catches the worm to mean that if you want to succeed in doing something, you should start as soon as possible. If you're going to make it to the Senate, you need to start right now.

  3. What's the origin of the phrase 'The early bird catches the worm'? This is first recorded in John Ray’s A collection of English proverbs 1670, 1678 : “The early bird catcheth the worm.”

  4. If you say that the early bird catches the worm, you mean that the person who arrives first in a place is most likely to get what they want. During the sales, the shops open at 7am, and the early bird catches the worm.

  5. a saying that means someone will have an advantage if they do something immediately, or before other people do it: This is still a nation that believes the early bird catches the worm. Everything comes to those who wait. Or the early bird catches the worm.

  6. Traducción de 'the early bird catches the worm' en el diccionario gratuito de inglés-español y muchas otras traducciones en español.

  7. Enunciado: The early bird catches the worm. Traducción literal: El pájaro madrugador atrapa el gusano. Marcador de uso: De uso actual. Fuentes: Bertram p. 199; Simpson p. 76; Fergusson nº 52.1; Mieder1992 p. 52; Ridout nº 199; Flavel1993 nº 30.