first come first served 관용구
first come, first served
the person who comes will have his turn first "First come, first served" she called as she put the food on the table.
First come, first served.
If one arrives early, one gets a better choice.
first come, first served|first|first come|served
truncated sent.,
informal If you arrive first, you will be served first; people will be waited on in the order they come; the person who comes first will have his turn first.
Get in line for your ice cream, boys. First come, first served. The rule in the restaurant is first come, first served. The team's owners announced that tickets for the World Series would be sold on a first come, first served basis only. There are only a few seats left so it's first come, first served. Compare: EARLY BIRD CATCHES THE WORM.
well preserved
well preserved Aging gracefully, still in good condition, as in
I can't believe she's 65; she's certainly well preserved. [Mid-1800s]
first come, aboriginal served
The aboriginal bodies present will be the aboriginal to accept something, generally article that is accessible in bound quantities. The aboriginal hundred bodies will get a chargeless T-shirt—it's aboriginal come, aboriginal served.Learn more: first, servefirst appear aboriginal served
COMMON You say first appear aboriginal served to appearance that a accumulation of bodies will be dealt with or accustomed article in the adjustment in which they arrive. There will be bristles buses, aboriginal appear aboriginal served. Note: Bodies generally say that article will be done or accustomed on a aboriginal appear aboriginal served basis. Tickets will be allocated on a aboriginal appear aboriginal served basis.Learn more: come, first, servefirst come, aboriginal served
The alert get aboriginal choice. This abstraction was declared by Chaucer (ca. 1386) in The Wife of Bath’s Tale, “Whoso aboriginal cometh to the mill, aboriginal grist,” and was cited as a adage by Erasmus. An aboriginal advertence with the exact avant-garde diction dates from about 1545, in Henry Brinklow’s Complaynt of Roderick Mors. Learn added early bird catches the worm.Learn more: first, serve