It is an idiomatic phrase meaning that one should not focus all his or her resources on one hope, possibility or avenue of success or just one person. If that one person fails you than you will be "broken" and left with nothing/no eggs. It is a proverb that warns against pinning all your hopes on one course of action. If you put all your eggs in one basket and then drop the basket, you will break all your eggs. Similarly, if you pin all your hopes on one course of action and it fails, then you are left with no recourse.
If you put all of your eggs in one basket when you are ready to sell them, then if anything happens to the basket, all the eggs will be gone. Therefore, it is best to put the eggs into several different baskets for safekeeping - or, best to put your money or time or investment into several different things.
Putting all your eggs in one basket means in most cases: investing all of your resource or money into one thing. The comparison is that if you put all of your eggs into one basket and something happens to the basket such as you dropping it, all of your eggs break and you have nothing left compared to distributing your eggs into two or more baskets so if something happens to the one, you still have your others eggs. If you invest all of your money into one company and the company fails, you have lost all of your money. Don't put all of your eggs in one basket.
If you put all your eggs in one basket, you risk everything on a single opportunity which, like eggs breaking, could go wrong.
It means putting all of ones hopes into one outcome. Example sentences: He tried out for both the football team and the cross country team, that way he didn't have all his eggs in one basket. My heart is set on going to Weslyn college, but I applied to four different schools to avoid having all my eggs in one basket. If Weslyn doesn't work out, I'm sure to attend college someplace else.
Spread you assets or eggs or anything else of value. Then you have a few baskets, if you drop one its not so important.
If all the eggs were in one basket, think what might happen if that basket were to somehow fall away or otherwise break. If the eggs are in two or more baskets, even if one basket breaks, you can still make it home with eggs.
In modern times, this idiom is best seen as the investment concept of diversification. The idea is to spread (diversify) your risk across several non-related areas. That way, if one of those areas turns sour (say a company goes bankrupt), it doesn't result in a you losing everything; you can keep going with your remaining investments.
It means to concentrate your bets, putting yourself in line for either a huge payoff or big losses. If you put "all your money in one wallet," your money is either completely safe from theft, or it's all gone because someone found and stole it.
It is an idiomatic phrase meaning that one should not focus all his or her resources on one hope, possibility or avenue of success.
If you put all of your eggs in one basket when you are ready to sell them, if anything happens to the basket, all the eggs will be gone. Therefore, it is best to put the eggs into several different baskets for safekeeping - or, best to put your money or time or investment into several different things.
Putting all your eggs in one basket means in most cases: investing all of your money into one thing. The comparison is that if you put all of your eggs into one basket and something happens to the basket such as you dropping it, all of your eggs break and you have nothing left compared to distributing your eggs into two or more baskets so if something happens to the one, you still have your others eggs. If you invest all of your money into one company and the company fails, you have lost all of your money. Don't put all of your eggs in one basket.
"Don't put all your eggs in one basket" is a proverb that warns against pinning all your hopes on one course of action. If you put all your eggs in one basket and then drop the basket, you will break all your eggs. Similarly, if you pin all your hopes on one course of action and it fails, then you are left with no recourse.
If you put all your eggs in one basket, you risk everything on a single opportunity which, like eggs breaking, could go wrong.
putting all of ones hopes into one outcome example sentences: He tried out for both the football team and the cross country team, that way he didn't have all his eggs in one basket. My heart is set on going to Weston college, but I applied to four different schools to avoid having all my eggs in one basket. If Weston doesn't work out, I'm sure to attend college someplace else.
Spread you assets or eggs or anything else of value. Then you have a few baskets, if you drop one its not so important.
Putting all your eggs in one basket means in most cases: investing all of your money into one thing. The comparison is that if you put all of your eggs into one basket and something happens to the basket such as you dropping it, all of your eggs break and you have nothing left compared to distributing your eggs into two or more baskets so if something happens to the one, you still have your others eggs. If you invest all of your money into one company and the company fails, you have lost all of your money. Don't put all of your eggs in one basket.
Concentrate your energies, your thoughts and your capital. The wise man puts all his eggs in one basket and watches the basket.
Andrew Carnegie
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/a/andrew_carnegie.html
This quote is actually by Mark Twain from his book, Pudd'nhead Wilson. The title character has a calendar that leads with Wilson's own original quotes. The "basket" remark is one such quote:
"Behold, the fool saith, "Put not all thine eggs in the one basket" - which is but a matter of saying, "Scatter your money and your attention"; but the wise man saith, "Put all your eggs in the one basket and - WATCH THAT BASKET." - Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar"
The boy put all his oranges,apples banannas,cherries,and plums into his basket,yes he put the whole gamut in the basket.
Eggs can represent hopes, dreams, resources, or opportunities. So broken eggs can mean shattered dreams. It is common to discuss putting all of one's eggs in one basket, which means pinning all of one's hopes on a single chance at success. For instance, what if an inner city kid puts all his hopes and energy into getting into the NBA to play basketball, and he loses his legs in a car wreck? Had he studied hard in addition to trying to play basketball, then such a tragic event would have less of a negative impact. Similar is true of investing. It is best to have your assets scattered among different investments of varying risk categories. If you put all your stock into a single, high-risk investment, then you may lose everything if something happens to it.
no meaning at all
Dictionary meaning's are all true they are not false.
no
I'm Putting All My Eggs in One Basket was created in 1936.
It is an idiomatic phrase meaning that one should not focus all his or her resources on one hope, possibility or avenue of success or just one person. If that one person fails you than you will be "broken" and left with nothing/no eggs. It is a proverb that warns against pinning all your hopes on one course of action. If you put all your eggs in one basket and then drop the basket, you will break all your eggs. Similarly, if you pin all your hopes on one course of action and it fails, then you are left with no recourse.If you put all of your eggs in one basket when you are ready to sell them, then if anything happens to the basket, all the eggs will be gone. Therefore, it is best to put the eggs into several different baskets for safekeeping - or, best to put your money or time or investment into several different things.Putting all your eggs in one basket means in most cases: investing all of your resource or money into one thing. The comparison is that if you put all of your eggs into one basket and something happens to the basket such as you dropping it, all of your eggs break and you have nothing left compared to distributing your eggs into two or more baskets so if something happens to the one, you still have your others eggs. If you invest all of your money into one company and the company fails, you have lost all of your money. Don't put all of your eggs in one basket.If you put all your eggs in one basket, you risk everything on a single opportunity which, like eggs breaking, could go wrong.It means putting all of ones hopes into one outcome. Example sentences: He tried out for both the football team and the cross country team, that way he didn't have all his eggs in one basket. My heart is set on going to Weslyn college, but I applied to four different schools to avoid having all my eggs in one basket. If Weslyn doesn't work out, I'm sure to attend college someplace else.Spread you assets or eggs or anything else of value. Then you have a few baskets, if you drop one its not so important.If all the eggs were in one basket, think what might happen if that basket were to somehow fall away or otherwise break. If the eggs are in two or more baskets, even if one basket breaks, you can still make it home with eggs.In modern times, this idiom is best seen as the investment concept of diversification. The idea is to spread (diversify) your risk across several non-related areas. That way, if one of those areas turns sour (say a company goes bankrupt), it doesn't result in a you losing everything; you can keep going with your remaining investments.It means to concentrate your bets, putting yourself in line for either a huge payoff or big losses. If you put "all your money in one wallet," your money is either completely safe from theft, or it's all gone because someone found and stole it.It is an idiomatic phrase meaning that one should not focus all his or her resources on one hope, possibility or avenue of success.If you put all of your eggs in one basket when you are ready to sell them, if anything happens to the basket, all the eggs will be gone. Therefore, it is best to put the eggs into several different baskets for safekeeping - or, best to put your money or time or investment into several different things.Putting all your eggs in one basket means in most cases: investing all of your money into one thing. The comparison is that if you put all of your eggs into one basket and something happens to the basket such as you dropping it, all of your eggs break and you have nothing left compared to distributing your eggs into two or more baskets so if something happens to the one, you still have your others eggs. If you invest all of your money into one company and the company fails, you have lost all of your money. Don't put all of your eggs in one basket."Don't put all your eggs in one basket" is a proverb that warns against pinning all your hopes on one course of action. If you put all your eggs in one basket and then drop the basket, you will break all your eggs. Similarly, if you pin all your hopes on one course of action and it fails, then you are left with no recourse.If you put all your eggs in one basket, you risk everything on a single opportunity which, like eggs breaking, could go wrong.putting all of ones hopes into one outcome example sentences: He tried out for both the football team and the cross country team, that way he didn't have all his eggs in one basket. My heart is set on going to Weston college, but I applied to four different schools to avoid having all my eggs in one basket. If Weston doesn't work out, I'm sure to attend college someplace else.Spread you assets or eggs or anything else of value. Then you have a few baskets, if you drop one its not so important.Putting all your eggs in one basket means in most cases: investing all of your money into one thing. The comparison is that if you put all of your eggs into one basket and something happens to the basket such as you dropping it, all of your eggs break and you have nothing left compared to distributing your eggs into two or more baskets so if something happens to the one, you still have your others eggs. If you invest all of your money into one company and the company fails, you have lost all of your money. Don't put all of your eggs in one basket.
Put all eggs in one basket, Even how hard the basket !
Although I am not certain of the origin, I have most often heard and read it referring to diversification in the stock market. Just as when you have all your eggs in one basket and you drop the basket you lose all you eggs, if you put all your money into one stock and the stock crashes, you can lose most or all of your investment.
"Don't put all your eggs in one basket" is a sentence. It is a proverb that reminds you not to put all your money into any one venture.
depends, lets say you have six eggs and they are 3 centimeters you can put them all in an 60 cm long and 10 cm deep basket put if the eggs are 7 centimeters and you have a basket which is 10x10 it wouldn't fit inside it, im trying to explain that it depends on the size of the egg and the basket.
the bigger the risk, the bigger the reward
"Put all the groceries in the shopping basket." "The basketball player made a perfect shot into the basket." "She carried a beautiful woven basket filled with flowers." "The cat jumped out of the laundry basket."
That all depends on the size of the basket.
The full saying is simply-- Do not place all of your eggs in one basket. It means you shouldn't count on one thing to the exclusion of everything else. You could slip or fall (or fail) and ruin the eggs when you crash.
i dont no
This is a humorous statement made by Mark Twain based on the proverb "don't put all your eggs in one basket." He meant, go ahead and keep all of your wealth in one location -- but watch that location securely!