User:Ansei/Sandbox-Mukojima



=DRAFT=


 * Hesse-Biber, Sharlene Nagy. (2010). Mixed Methods Research: Merging Theory with Practice, p. 47.
 * Sawnhey, Mohabir. "Putting the Horse First," CIO, Vol. 15, No. 15 (May 15, 2002), p. 38.


 * Whiting, Bartlett J. (1977). Early American Proverbs and Proverbial Phrases, p. 58.
 * Walter, Elizabeth. (2008). Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary, p. 209; excerpt, "a vehicle with either two or four wheels which is pulled by a horse, and which is used for carrying goods: a horse and cart ... idiom put the cart before the horse to do things in the wrong order"


 * Knight, John. (1835). Mechanics' Magazine, and Journal of the Mechanics' Institute, Vol. 4, p. 363.
 * "Cart before the horse," Popular Mechanics, April 1907, p. 425; excerpt, " ... 1- hp motor ... two speeds forward; the machine is not constructed to reverse. No lines are used, the conveyance being directed by means of a steering wheel ...."

History

 * Apperson, George Latimer. (2006). The Wordsworth dictionary of proverbs, p. 85; Manser, Martin H. (2007). ''The Facts on File Dictionary of Proverbs, p. 63; excerpt, "The proverb was first recorded in this form c. 1520."
 * Adamson, Sylvia et al. (2007). Renaissance Figures of Speech, p. 133.


 * Wilkinson, Peter Richard. (2008). [http://books.google.com/books?id=rLFqbQX52j0C&pg=PA171&dq= Concise Thesaurus of Traditional English Metaphors, p. 171; excerpt, "1340 ... the wrong way round; the wrong order; with the wrong emphasis; confuse cause and effect"

Context

 * Wolfgang, Mieder and Alan Dundes. (1981). The wisdom of many, p. 57; excerpt, "... the proverb reverses the usual chronological priority of actions A and B ....  In attempting to distinguish between identificational versus contrastive features in proverbs or between nonoppositional or oppositional proverbs, one needs to bear in mind that not all proverbs fall neatly into one category."


 * Stewart, Peter. (2010). Essential Radio Skills: How To Present A Radio Show, p. 214; excerpt, "By putting the cart before the horse, you use a comment to hook people into listening to the rest of the link .... By putting the horse before the cart, the listener knows all the information in the first sentence and they can mentally switch off ...."


 * Burrough-Boenisch, Joy. (2004). Righting English That's Gone Dutch, p. 123.s
 * Raines, James. C. (2008). Evidence Based Practice in School Mental Health, p. 91.


 * Shipley, Joseph Twadell. (200). The Origins of English Words: A Discursive Dictionary of Dictionary of Indo-European Roots, p. 113; excerpt, "... it is usually easier to pull than to push."