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Our most important client will be in town tomorrow, so let's all roll out the red carpet and take him out to dinner.
He has been treating other people like that for years. Now it happens to him. Reply: You reap what you sow.
My grandfather's was generous to a fault. He gave away all of his money. Reply: But he did help a lot of people.
He dresses in plain clothes and drives an old car. Who would know he is the richest man in town? Reply: You can't judge a book by its cover.
Did you see those two people cutting in front of us in line just now? Let's cut in front of them and give them a taste of their own medicine!
You do like that girl, don't you? Answer: No! I don't! Not at all! Why do you think so? Reply: You protest too much. #Protest too much comes from Hamlet by William Shakespeare; the Queen speaking: The lady doth protest too much, methinks. (Note: people do not usually use the word methinks when they are speaking English today.) To protest too much is to insist so passionately about something not being true that people suspect the opposite of what you are saying.