What are some chicken idioms?

Some chicken idioms include:

  • “Chickens come home to roost”—If your “chickens have come home to roost,” it means that a problem you have now is the result of something you did in the past. The person saying it usually means that the past action was wrong and that the result is deserved (e.g., “He didn’t do much work this semester, and now his grades are bad; his chickens have come home to roost”).
  • “Count your chickens (before they hatch)”—If you “don’t count your chickens” or “don’t count your chickens before they hatch,” you don’t make plans based on something that might not happen (e.g., “I don’t want to count my chickens before they hatch, so I’m not going to sign the apartment lease until I’ve signed the job contract”).
  • “Chicken feed”—If someone says that an amount of money is “chicken feed,” they mean it is a very small or unimportant amount, especially compared to what is normal or expected (e.g., “Paying five million dollars for a startup is chicken feed for a Big Tech company”).

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