an apple a day (keeps the doctor away)
an apple a day (keeps the doctor away)
A proverbial preventive remedy. Versions of this saying date from the seventeenth century or earlier, appearing in John Ray’s proverb collection of 1670 and elsewhere. A cliché by the late nineteenth century, it gave rise to numerous humorous versions, such as “A stanza a day to keep the wolf away” by the poet Phyllis McGinley.
See also: apple, doctor
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
- drunk as a lord/skunk
- busy as a beaver/bee
- teach a man to fish
- last-ditch defense/effort
- it takes a village
- village
- time on one's hands, (to have)
- go(ing) to the dogs
- flying colors, come off with
- the best-laid plans go astray