Romeo said that he was fortunes fool after he killed Tybalt.
"Oh I am fortunes fool!"
"Fortune's fool" is a phrase made famous by Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet. It refers to someone who is subject to the whims of fate and appears to be controlled by chance or luck, often to their detriment. It implies that the person is unaware of their own role in shaping their destiny.
Purple
The term 'amadan' (there are various spellings, depending on dialect) in the Scot language (Gaelic/Celt) means fool or idiot. Like many languages this is the term that is used for the male. For females, the term would be 'oinseach'. Both meaning fool, but gender specific words.
The term 'witling' is a derogatory or mean term for "A person who considers themselves to be witty". Example: My witling uncle only made a fool of himself.
The Tagalog term for "fool's gold" is "ginto ng mangmang."
it means dam fool it means dam fool it means dam fool
Foolproof usually refers to instructions or directions. In this cases if someone was to describe instructions or directions as "foolproof" it would mean that anyone would understand them. The term literally comes from the two words "fool" and "proof", where "fool" refers to an idiot and "proof" refers to failsafe, coming together to describe that something is failsafe against even a fool.
move on change gear ect.
We do not know how Elizabethan audiences reacted to specific lines in plays. Nobody recorded that kind of information.
Tarot cards are used to tell fortunes and include those characters in the deck