put the same shoe on every foot

English

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Etymology

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From the proverb, you cannot put the same shoe on every foot.

Phrase

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put the same shoe on every foot

  1. (idiomatic) To attempt to apply a single solution to different problems.
    • 1883, Victor Lafayette Conrad, The Luther Memorial, page 772:
      The king of England, who is your holiness's son, is not so like the rest of the world. We cannot put the same shoe on every foot.
    • 2007, Robert Mayhew, Essays on Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead, →ISBN, page 122:
      You would laugh at a cobbler who should attempt to put the same shoe on every foot.
    • 2014 November 3, Francis Greenburger, “Incarcerating the Mentally Ill Makes Us All Less Safe”, in VICE News:
      Watch anything in a cage, that is run on a regulatory system of control, sensory deprivation and or sensory abuse, really really poor nutrition, no regard for individual dignity, trying to put the same shoe on every foot,etc.