Is there a proverb to express “You are too late and it's your own fault.”?





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In Lithuanian language there is a proverb that translated word-for-word would say "The train does not wait for the shitting ones."



While sounding somewhat rude, it is perfect for expressing: "You are too late, and that's your own fault."



Is there any proverb in English that could convey the same idea?










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  • 10




    I live in the U.S. and never had the pleasure of hearing this Lithuanian proverb before. Thank you! I have happily added it to my vocabulary. "The train does not wait for the shitting ones." Love it.
    – Headblender
    Nov 15 at 20:46






  • 3




    Tangentially related: Gorbatchev's famous "Those who are late will be castigated by life itself" ("Wer zu spät kommt, den bestraft das Leben"), aimed at Honecker.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 16 at 1:07










  • By “shitting ones,” do you mean those using the toilet?
    – Khalid Hussain
    2 days ago








  • 1




    A word or phrase request can easily attract a long list of answers when it’s too subjective – more of a poll or request for ideas. Unfortunately neither are a good fit for the Stack Exchange model. A Stack Exchange question is objective and specific enough that it has a clearly “right” answer. See: “Real questions have answers, not items or ideas or opinions”, “Single word requests, crosswords, and the fight against mediocrity”.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago






  • 1




    If possible, add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. If this is not possible because you really do have a subjective question, a welcoming place to ask for advice is our English Language & Usage Chat.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago

















up vote
55
down vote

favorite
7












In Lithuanian language there is a proverb that translated word-for-word would say "The train does not wait for the shitting ones."



While sounding somewhat rude, it is perfect for expressing: "You are too late, and that's your own fault."



Is there any proverb in English that could convey the same idea?










share|improve this question




















  • 10




    I live in the U.S. and never had the pleasure of hearing this Lithuanian proverb before. Thank you! I have happily added it to my vocabulary. "The train does not wait for the shitting ones." Love it.
    – Headblender
    Nov 15 at 20:46






  • 3




    Tangentially related: Gorbatchev's famous "Those who are late will be castigated by life itself" ("Wer zu spät kommt, den bestraft das Leben"), aimed at Honecker.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 16 at 1:07










  • By “shitting ones,” do you mean those using the toilet?
    – Khalid Hussain
    2 days ago








  • 1




    A word or phrase request can easily attract a long list of answers when it’s too subjective – more of a poll or request for ideas. Unfortunately neither are a good fit for the Stack Exchange model. A Stack Exchange question is objective and specific enough that it has a clearly “right” answer. See: “Real questions have answers, not items or ideas or opinions”, “Single word requests, crosswords, and the fight against mediocrity”.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago






  • 1




    If possible, add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. If this is not possible because you really do have a subjective question, a welcoming place to ask for advice is our English Language & Usage Chat.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago













up vote
55
down vote

favorite
7









up vote
55
down vote

favorite
7






7





In Lithuanian language there is a proverb that translated word-for-word would say "The train does not wait for the shitting ones."



While sounding somewhat rude, it is perfect for expressing: "You are too late, and that's your own fault."



Is there any proverb in English that could convey the same idea?










share|improve this question















In Lithuanian language there is a proverb that translated word-for-word would say "The train does not wait for the shitting ones."



While sounding somewhat rude, it is perfect for expressing: "You are too late, and that's your own fault."



Is there any proverb in English that could convey the same idea?







proverb-requests






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edited Nov 16 at 12:07









maborg

1033




1033










asked Nov 14 at 14:58









april

381125




381125








  • 10




    I live in the U.S. and never had the pleasure of hearing this Lithuanian proverb before. Thank you! I have happily added it to my vocabulary. "The train does not wait for the shitting ones." Love it.
    – Headblender
    Nov 15 at 20:46






  • 3




    Tangentially related: Gorbatchev's famous "Those who are late will be castigated by life itself" ("Wer zu spät kommt, den bestraft das Leben"), aimed at Honecker.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 16 at 1:07










  • By “shitting ones,” do you mean those using the toilet?
    – Khalid Hussain
    2 days ago








  • 1




    A word or phrase request can easily attract a long list of answers when it’s too subjective – more of a poll or request for ideas. Unfortunately neither are a good fit for the Stack Exchange model. A Stack Exchange question is objective and specific enough that it has a clearly “right” answer. See: “Real questions have answers, not items or ideas or opinions”, “Single word requests, crosswords, and the fight against mediocrity”.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago






  • 1




    If possible, add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. If this is not possible because you really do have a subjective question, a welcoming place to ask for advice is our English Language & Usage Chat.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago














  • 10




    I live in the U.S. and never had the pleasure of hearing this Lithuanian proverb before. Thank you! I have happily added it to my vocabulary. "The train does not wait for the shitting ones." Love it.
    – Headblender
    Nov 15 at 20:46






  • 3




    Tangentially related: Gorbatchev's famous "Those who are late will be castigated by life itself" ("Wer zu spät kommt, den bestraft das Leben"), aimed at Honecker.
    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 16 at 1:07










  • By “shitting ones,” do you mean those using the toilet?
    – Khalid Hussain
    2 days ago








  • 1




    A word or phrase request can easily attract a long list of answers when it’s too subjective – more of a poll or request for ideas. Unfortunately neither are a good fit for the Stack Exchange model. A Stack Exchange question is objective and specific enough that it has a clearly “right” answer. See: “Real questions have answers, not items or ideas or opinions”, “Single word requests, crosswords, and the fight against mediocrity”.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago






  • 1




    If possible, add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. If this is not possible because you really do have a subjective question, a welcoming place to ask for advice is our English Language & Usage Chat.
    – MetaEd
    2 days ago








10




10




I live in the U.S. and never had the pleasure of hearing this Lithuanian proverb before. Thank you! I have happily added it to my vocabulary. "The train does not wait for the shitting ones." Love it.
– Headblender
Nov 15 at 20:46




I live in the U.S. and never had the pleasure of hearing this Lithuanian proverb before. Thank you! I have happily added it to my vocabulary. "The train does not wait for the shitting ones." Love it.
– Headblender
Nov 15 at 20:46




3




3




Tangentially related: Gorbatchev's famous "Those who are late will be castigated by life itself" ("Wer zu spät kommt, den bestraft das Leben"), aimed at Honecker.
– Peter A. Schneider
Nov 16 at 1:07




Tangentially related: Gorbatchev's famous "Those who are late will be castigated by life itself" ("Wer zu spät kommt, den bestraft das Leben"), aimed at Honecker.
– Peter A. Schneider
Nov 16 at 1:07












By “shitting ones,” do you mean those using the toilet?
– Khalid Hussain
2 days ago






By “shitting ones,” do you mean those using the toilet?
– Khalid Hussain
2 days ago






1




1




A word or phrase request can easily attract a long list of answers when it’s too subjective – more of a poll or request for ideas. Unfortunately neither are a good fit for the Stack Exchange model. A Stack Exchange question is objective and specific enough that it has a clearly “right” answer. See: “Real questions have answers, not items or ideas or opinions”, “Single word requests, crosswords, and the fight against mediocrity”.
– MetaEd
2 days ago




A word or phrase request can easily attract a long list of answers when it’s too subjective – more of a poll or request for ideas. Unfortunately neither are a good fit for the Stack Exchange model. A Stack Exchange question is objective and specific enough that it has a clearly “right” answer. See: “Real questions have answers, not items or ideas or opinions”, “Single word requests, crosswords, and the fight against mediocrity”.
– MetaEd
2 days ago




1




1




If possible, add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. If this is not possible because you really do have a subjective question, a welcoming place to ask for advice is our English Language & Usage Chat.
– MetaEd
2 days ago




If possible, add details of research you’ve done, especially solutions you’ve already rejected, and why. If this is not possible because you really do have a subjective question, a welcoming place to ask for advice is our English Language & Usage Chat.
– MetaEd
2 days ago










11 Answers
11






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
140
down vote



accepted










More succintly, and less formally, there is also "You snooze, you lose!"




(idiomatic) If you are not alert and attentive, you will not be successful.




https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/you_snooze_you_lose






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    Ah, this could be it! While it looks quite different, I think the idea behind is basically the same.
    – april
    Nov 15 at 9:10






  • 1




    Honestly, I like this one MUST better than the Lithuanian one. Sometimes nature calls and then does not cooperate with a speedy exit, and it's not your fault that you missed the train because of this. Snoozing, on the other hand, implies something deliberate that is your fault, and at least to me this form of the word omits sleep disorders beyond your control.
    – Michael
    Nov 16 at 22:29


















up vote
119
down vote













Time and tide wait for no man, is an English proverb with a similar meaning.






share|improve this answer

















  • 77




    Obligatory XKCD: xkcd.com/1704
    – justhalf
    Nov 14 at 18:16






  • 1




    I find this quite appropriate, maybe the closest in meaning, maybe just a little less common than some of the other suggestion, thanks!
    – april
    Nov 15 at 9:08








  • 3




    @justhalf It's really not obligatory. You could just ... not post xkcd links. It's not even a funny comic...
    – only_pro
    Nov 16 at 18:22






  • 8




    XKCD adds value to everything. (46 upvoters agree)
    – Yvonne Aburrow
    Nov 16 at 18:52






  • 1




    I doubt that I have seen 200 in total, so you might be right. I only have time to look at XKCD when I am ... xkcd.com/303
    – Mawg
    2 hours ago


















up vote
50
down vote













I can think of two that might be appropriate.



Though it doesn't necessarily deal directly with tardiness, there is, "You've made your bed. Now lie in it."
According to the online Cambridge Dictionary, it means:




said to someone who must accept the unpleasant results of something
they have done




Also, there is, "That ship has sailed."
The website UsingEnglish.com defines that as:




A particular opportunity has passed you by when that ship has sailed.




Although fault isn't explicit, I'd argue the latter idiom suggests the fault lies with the individual having waited too long to take advantage of an opportunity.






share|improve this answer



















  • 7




    A variant is "to miss the boat": collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/to-miss-the-boat
    – Paul Johnson
    Nov 16 at 11:01






  • 2




    @PaulJohnson: true, please post that one as answer in its own right, it's also good
    – smci
    Nov 17 at 2:27


















up vote
30
down vote













A day late and a dollar short



is another idiom meaning




late and ill-prepared




There is even a TV movie with this as a title based on a book of the same title






share|improve this answer





















  • Wow, so many story plots come to mind with this expression, truly poetic.
    – brasofilo
    Nov 18 at 9:56






  • 1




    @brasofilo, and the universalit of the statement is amazing. Every person on Earth has experienced this truism.
    – JBH
    Nov 18 at 17:29


















up vote
15
down vote














The early bird gets the worm.




Whoever arrives at the prize first gets it. (It's implied that slowpokes do not get anything)






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  • 10




    “EARLY BIRD Oh, if you’re a bird, be an early bird And catch the worm for your breakfast plate. If you’re a bird, be an early early bird-- But if you’re a worm, sleep late.” ― Shel Silverstein, Where the Sidewalk Ends
    – KannE
    Nov 15 at 3:05






  • 17




    I still prefer the corollary: "But the second mouse gets the cheese..."
    – Darrel Hoffman
    Nov 15 at 16:32










  • And if you want something else for breakfast, get up later.
    – RedSonja
    Nov 16 at 9:14










  • This expresses the corollary of the OP's thought.
    – Andrew Neely
    3 hours ago


















up vote
9
down vote













How about




He who hesitates is lost




I had to look up the source for this proverb, which seems to be a play:



https://www.bookbrowse.com/expressions/detail/index.cfm/expression_number/455/he-who-hesitates-is-lost






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    8
    down vote













    Regarding 'trains' and tardiness...




    That train has left the station.




    (Also, the train instead of that train is said.)



    Broadly defined:




    That opportunity has already passed; that cannot be undone.




    https://www.phrases.net/phrase/that-train-has-left-the-station_20986



    It's similar to this saying--You've missed the boat.--meaning something is already underway, so it's too late to weigh in on that; you've missed your chance to do so or an opportunity in general.



    And regarding the [pooping] ones...



    "[Poop] or get off the pot!" Basic meaning: Quit stalling!



    Get it? Public restroom stalls... Never mind; toilet humor is optional.






    share|improve this answer























    • Isn't 'shit or get off the pot' more about hogging facilities/opportunities and stopping others accessing them? It's akin to 'dog in the manger' in that it is about the result of the shitter/dog being in a place they have no use for as a dog cannot east hay. The idiom the OP is after is about the person's loss being their own fault.
      – Spagirl
      Nov 15 at 15:08












    • @Spagirl, I know, some people use it like--My turn!--quite literally in public restrooms sometimes, but it's more about the 'constipated' person wasting time and possibly missing out because of it; it's not really about selfishness, but that's an interesting viewpoint. Which are we more concerned about--the pooper or the pot?--ha-ha. In any case, the poop part is intended to be an aside; that's why no reference is cited for it, but here is one just FYI: en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/….
      – KannE
      Nov 15 at 17:25












    • I stand corrected then, that's certainly never been my understanding of the meaning. Every day a school day!
      – Spagirl
      Nov 15 at 17:33






    • 1




      My upvote is for "The train has left the station."
      – J.R.
      Nov 16 at 12:28


















    up vote
    4
    down vote













    I've once heard the latin saying :




    Tarde venientibus ossa.




    Those who come late just get the scraps [litt. 'bones'].



    This is admittedly not English, but a reference exists in wikipedia.






    share|improve this answer





















    • My English parents used this saying on me to mean "you are too late and it is your fault". Typically for not getting to the dinner table promptly and the worst I ever actually got was a cold dinner.
      – Simon G.
      Nov 15 at 16:19


















    up vote
    4
    down vote













    @drewhart mentioned "that ship has sailed", but it doesn't really imply fault. However a common variant is "You missed the boat", which does imply that it is your fault in much the same way as the Lithuanian proverb.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Yes but neither has any inference of "fault", does it?
      – Robbie Goodwin
      yesterday










    • @RobbieGoodwin "That ship has sailed" may not, but "You missed the boat" does. Answer edited, as its a good point.
      – Paul Johnson
      24 mins ago


















    up vote
    2
    down vote













    If you say




    Too little, too late




    you're "blaming someone for not doing enough to prevent a problem and for taking action only after the problem had become very bad."



    https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/too-little-too-late






    share|improve this answer




























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Although not specifically about lateness an Englishman might remind one of the ongoing consequences of a person`s actions by saying "The pigeons have come (or will have come) home to roost.






      share|improve this answer




















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        11 Answers
        11






        active

        oldest

        votes








        11 Answers
        11






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes








        up vote
        140
        down vote



        accepted










        More succintly, and less formally, there is also "You snooze, you lose!"




        (idiomatic) If you are not alert and attentive, you will not be successful.




        https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/you_snooze_you_lose






        share|improve this answer

















        • 1




          Ah, this could be it! While it looks quite different, I think the idea behind is basically the same.
          – april
          Nov 15 at 9:10






        • 1




          Honestly, I like this one MUST better than the Lithuanian one. Sometimes nature calls and then does not cooperate with a speedy exit, and it's not your fault that you missed the train because of this. Snoozing, on the other hand, implies something deliberate that is your fault, and at least to me this form of the word omits sleep disorders beyond your control.
          – Michael
          Nov 16 at 22:29















        up vote
        140
        down vote



        accepted










        More succintly, and less formally, there is also "You snooze, you lose!"




        (idiomatic) If you are not alert and attentive, you will not be successful.




        https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/you_snooze_you_lose






        share|improve this answer

















        • 1




          Ah, this could be it! While it looks quite different, I think the idea behind is basically the same.
          – april
          Nov 15 at 9:10






        • 1




          Honestly, I like this one MUST better than the Lithuanian one. Sometimes nature calls and then does not cooperate with a speedy exit, and it's not your fault that you missed the train because of this. Snoozing, on the other hand, implies something deliberate that is your fault, and at least to me this form of the word omits sleep disorders beyond your control.
          – Michael
          Nov 16 at 22:29













        up vote
        140
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        140
        down vote



        accepted






        More succintly, and less formally, there is also "You snooze, you lose!"




        (idiomatic) If you are not alert and attentive, you will not be successful.




        https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/you_snooze_you_lose






        share|improve this answer












        More succintly, and less formally, there is also "You snooze, you lose!"




        (idiomatic) If you are not alert and attentive, you will not be successful.




        https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/you_snooze_you_lose







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 14 at 17:36









        Ddddan

        1,076157




        1,076157








        • 1




          Ah, this could be it! While it looks quite different, I think the idea behind is basically the same.
          – april
          Nov 15 at 9:10






        • 1




          Honestly, I like this one MUST better than the Lithuanian one. Sometimes nature calls and then does not cooperate with a speedy exit, and it's not your fault that you missed the train because of this. Snoozing, on the other hand, implies something deliberate that is your fault, and at least to me this form of the word omits sleep disorders beyond your control.
          – Michael
          Nov 16 at 22:29














        • 1




          Ah, this could be it! While it looks quite different, I think the idea behind is basically the same.
          – april
          Nov 15 at 9:10






        • 1




          Honestly, I like this one MUST better than the Lithuanian one. Sometimes nature calls and then does not cooperate with a speedy exit, and it's not your fault that you missed the train because of this. Snoozing, on the other hand, implies something deliberate that is your fault, and at least to me this form of the word omits sleep disorders beyond your control.
          – Michael
          Nov 16 at 22:29








        1




        1




        Ah, this could be it! While it looks quite different, I think the idea behind is basically the same.
        – april
        Nov 15 at 9:10




        Ah, this could be it! While it looks quite different, I think the idea behind is basically the same.
        – april
        Nov 15 at 9:10




        1




        1




        Honestly, I like this one MUST better than the Lithuanian one. Sometimes nature calls and then does not cooperate with a speedy exit, and it's not your fault that you missed the train because of this. Snoozing, on the other hand, implies something deliberate that is your fault, and at least to me this form of the word omits sleep disorders beyond your control.
        – Michael
        Nov 16 at 22:29




        Honestly, I like this one MUST better than the Lithuanian one. Sometimes nature calls and then does not cooperate with a speedy exit, and it's not your fault that you missed the train because of this. Snoozing, on the other hand, implies something deliberate that is your fault, and at least to me this form of the word omits sleep disorders beyond your control.
        – Michael
        Nov 16 at 22:29












        up vote
        119
        down vote













        Time and tide wait for no man, is an English proverb with a similar meaning.






        share|improve this answer

















        • 77




          Obligatory XKCD: xkcd.com/1704
          – justhalf
          Nov 14 at 18:16






        • 1




          I find this quite appropriate, maybe the closest in meaning, maybe just a little less common than some of the other suggestion, thanks!
          – april
          Nov 15 at 9:08








        • 3




          @justhalf It's really not obligatory. You could just ... not post xkcd links. It's not even a funny comic...
          – only_pro
          Nov 16 at 18:22






        • 8




          XKCD adds value to everything. (46 upvoters agree)
          – Yvonne Aburrow
          Nov 16 at 18:52






        • 1




          I doubt that I have seen 200 in total, so you might be right. I only have time to look at XKCD when I am ... xkcd.com/303
          – Mawg
          2 hours ago















        up vote
        119
        down vote













        Time and tide wait for no man, is an English proverb with a similar meaning.






        share|improve this answer

















        • 77




          Obligatory XKCD: xkcd.com/1704
          – justhalf
          Nov 14 at 18:16






        • 1




          I find this quite appropriate, maybe the closest in meaning, maybe just a little less common than some of the other suggestion, thanks!
          – april
          Nov 15 at 9:08








        • 3




          @justhalf It's really not obligatory. You could just ... not post xkcd links. It's not even a funny comic...
          – only_pro
          Nov 16 at 18:22






        • 8




          XKCD adds value to everything. (46 upvoters agree)
          – Yvonne Aburrow
          Nov 16 at 18:52






        • 1




          I doubt that I have seen 200 in total, so you might be right. I only have time to look at XKCD when I am ... xkcd.com/303
          – Mawg
          2 hours ago













        up vote
        119
        down vote










        up vote
        119
        down vote









        Time and tide wait for no man, is an English proverb with a similar meaning.






        share|improve this answer












        Time and tide wait for no man, is an English proverb with a similar meaning.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 14 at 16:20









        Dmann

        1,319119




        1,319119








        • 77




          Obligatory XKCD: xkcd.com/1704
          – justhalf
          Nov 14 at 18:16






        • 1




          I find this quite appropriate, maybe the closest in meaning, maybe just a little less common than some of the other suggestion, thanks!
          – april
          Nov 15 at 9:08








        • 3




          @justhalf It's really not obligatory. You could just ... not post xkcd links. It's not even a funny comic...
          – only_pro
          Nov 16 at 18:22






        • 8




          XKCD adds value to everything. (46 upvoters agree)
          – Yvonne Aburrow
          Nov 16 at 18:52






        • 1




          I doubt that I have seen 200 in total, so you might be right. I only have time to look at XKCD when I am ... xkcd.com/303
          – Mawg
          2 hours ago














        • 77




          Obligatory XKCD: xkcd.com/1704
          – justhalf
          Nov 14 at 18:16






        • 1




          I find this quite appropriate, maybe the closest in meaning, maybe just a little less common than some of the other suggestion, thanks!
          – april
          Nov 15 at 9:08








        • 3




          @justhalf It's really not obligatory. You could just ... not post xkcd links. It's not even a funny comic...
          – only_pro
          Nov 16 at 18:22






        • 8




          XKCD adds value to everything. (46 upvoters agree)
          – Yvonne Aburrow
          Nov 16 at 18:52






        • 1




          I doubt that I have seen 200 in total, so you might be right. I only have time to look at XKCD when I am ... xkcd.com/303
          – Mawg
          2 hours ago








        77




        77




        Obligatory XKCD: xkcd.com/1704
        – justhalf
        Nov 14 at 18:16




        Obligatory XKCD: xkcd.com/1704
        – justhalf
        Nov 14 at 18:16




        1




        1




        I find this quite appropriate, maybe the closest in meaning, maybe just a little less common than some of the other suggestion, thanks!
        – april
        Nov 15 at 9:08






        I find this quite appropriate, maybe the closest in meaning, maybe just a little less common than some of the other suggestion, thanks!
        – april
        Nov 15 at 9:08






        3




        3




        @justhalf It's really not obligatory. You could just ... not post xkcd links. It's not even a funny comic...
        – only_pro
        Nov 16 at 18:22




        @justhalf It's really not obligatory. You could just ... not post xkcd links. It's not even a funny comic...
        – only_pro
        Nov 16 at 18:22




        8




        8




        XKCD adds value to everything. (46 upvoters agree)
        – Yvonne Aburrow
        Nov 16 at 18:52




        XKCD adds value to everything. (46 upvoters agree)
        – Yvonne Aburrow
        Nov 16 at 18:52




        1




        1




        I doubt that I have seen 200 in total, so you might be right. I only have time to look at XKCD when I am ... xkcd.com/303
        – Mawg
        2 hours ago




        I doubt that I have seen 200 in total, so you might be right. I only have time to look at XKCD when I am ... xkcd.com/303
        – Mawg
        2 hours ago










        up vote
        50
        down vote













        I can think of two that might be appropriate.



        Though it doesn't necessarily deal directly with tardiness, there is, "You've made your bed. Now lie in it."
        According to the online Cambridge Dictionary, it means:




        said to someone who must accept the unpleasant results of something
        they have done




        Also, there is, "That ship has sailed."
        The website UsingEnglish.com defines that as:




        A particular opportunity has passed you by when that ship has sailed.




        Although fault isn't explicit, I'd argue the latter idiom suggests the fault lies with the individual having waited too long to take advantage of an opportunity.






        share|improve this answer



















        • 7




          A variant is "to miss the boat": collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/to-miss-the-boat
          – Paul Johnson
          Nov 16 at 11:01






        • 2




          @PaulJohnson: true, please post that one as answer in its own right, it's also good
          – smci
          Nov 17 at 2:27















        up vote
        50
        down vote













        I can think of two that might be appropriate.



        Though it doesn't necessarily deal directly with tardiness, there is, "You've made your bed. Now lie in it."
        According to the online Cambridge Dictionary, it means:




        said to someone who must accept the unpleasant results of something
        they have done




        Also, there is, "That ship has sailed."
        The website UsingEnglish.com defines that as:




        A particular opportunity has passed you by when that ship has sailed.




        Although fault isn't explicit, I'd argue the latter idiom suggests the fault lies with the individual having waited too long to take advantage of an opportunity.






        share|improve this answer



















        • 7




          A variant is "to miss the boat": collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/to-miss-the-boat
          – Paul Johnson
          Nov 16 at 11:01






        • 2




          @PaulJohnson: true, please post that one as answer in its own right, it's also good
          – smci
          Nov 17 at 2:27













        up vote
        50
        down vote










        up vote
        50
        down vote









        I can think of two that might be appropriate.



        Though it doesn't necessarily deal directly with tardiness, there is, "You've made your bed. Now lie in it."
        According to the online Cambridge Dictionary, it means:




        said to someone who must accept the unpleasant results of something
        they have done




        Also, there is, "That ship has sailed."
        The website UsingEnglish.com defines that as:




        A particular opportunity has passed you by when that ship has sailed.




        Although fault isn't explicit, I'd argue the latter idiom suggests the fault lies with the individual having waited too long to take advantage of an opportunity.






        share|improve this answer














        I can think of two that might be appropriate.



        Though it doesn't necessarily deal directly with tardiness, there is, "You've made your bed. Now lie in it."
        According to the online Cambridge Dictionary, it means:




        said to someone who must accept the unpleasant results of something
        they have done




        Also, there is, "That ship has sailed."
        The website UsingEnglish.com defines that as:




        A particular opportunity has passed you by when that ship has sailed.




        Although fault isn't explicit, I'd argue the latter idiom suggests the fault lies with the individual having waited too long to take advantage of an opportunity.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Nov 14 at 22:47

























        answered Nov 14 at 16:13









        drewhart

        1,21328




        1,21328








        • 7




          A variant is "to miss the boat": collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/to-miss-the-boat
          – Paul Johnson
          Nov 16 at 11:01






        • 2




          @PaulJohnson: true, please post that one as answer in its own right, it's also good
          – smci
          Nov 17 at 2:27














        • 7




          A variant is "to miss the boat": collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/to-miss-the-boat
          – Paul Johnson
          Nov 16 at 11:01






        • 2




          @PaulJohnson: true, please post that one as answer in its own right, it's also good
          – smci
          Nov 17 at 2:27








        7




        7




        A variant is "to miss the boat": collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/to-miss-the-boat
        – Paul Johnson
        Nov 16 at 11:01




        A variant is "to miss the boat": collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/to-miss-the-boat
        – Paul Johnson
        Nov 16 at 11:01




        2




        2




        @PaulJohnson: true, please post that one as answer in its own right, it's also good
        – smci
        Nov 17 at 2:27




        @PaulJohnson: true, please post that one as answer in its own right, it's also good
        – smci
        Nov 17 at 2:27










        up vote
        30
        down vote













        A day late and a dollar short



        is another idiom meaning




        late and ill-prepared




        There is even a TV movie with this as a title based on a book of the same title






        share|improve this answer





















        • Wow, so many story plots come to mind with this expression, truly poetic.
          – brasofilo
          Nov 18 at 9:56






        • 1




          @brasofilo, and the universalit of the statement is amazing. Every person on Earth has experienced this truism.
          – JBH
          Nov 18 at 17:29















        up vote
        30
        down vote













        A day late and a dollar short



        is another idiom meaning




        late and ill-prepared




        There is even a TV movie with this as a title based on a book of the same title






        share|improve this answer





















        • Wow, so many story plots come to mind with this expression, truly poetic.
          – brasofilo
          Nov 18 at 9:56






        • 1




          @brasofilo, and the universalit of the statement is amazing. Every person on Earth has experienced this truism.
          – JBH
          Nov 18 at 17:29













        up vote
        30
        down vote










        up vote
        30
        down vote









        A day late and a dollar short



        is another idiom meaning




        late and ill-prepared




        There is even a TV movie with this as a title based on a book of the same title






        share|improve this answer












        A day late and a dollar short



        is another idiom meaning




        late and ill-prepared




        There is even a TV movie with this as a title based on a book of the same title







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 14 at 22:51









        Michael J.

        1,972514




        1,972514












        • Wow, so many story plots come to mind with this expression, truly poetic.
          – brasofilo
          Nov 18 at 9:56






        • 1




          @brasofilo, and the universalit of the statement is amazing. Every person on Earth has experienced this truism.
          – JBH
          Nov 18 at 17:29


















        • Wow, so many story plots come to mind with this expression, truly poetic.
          – brasofilo
          Nov 18 at 9:56






        • 1




          @brasofilo, and the universalit of the statement is amazing. Every person on Earth has experienced this truism.
          – JBH
          Nov 18 at 17:29
















        Wow, so many story plots come to mind with this expression, truly poetic.
        – brasofilo
        Nov 18 at 9:56




        Wow, so many story plots come to mind with this expression, truly poetic.
        – brasofilo
        Nov 18 at 9:56




        1




        1




        @brasofilo, and the universalit of the statement is amazing. Every person on Earth has experienced this truism.
        – JBH
        Nov 18 at 17:29




        @brasofilo, and the universalit of the statement is amazing. Every person on Earth has experienced this truism.
        – JBH
        Nov 18 at 17:29










        up vote
        15
        down vote














        The early bird gets the worm.




        Whoever arrives at the prize first gets it. (It's implied that slowpokes do not get anything)






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Arcanist Lupus is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.














        • 10




          “EARLY BIRD Oh, if you’re a bird, be an early bird And catch the worm for your breakfast plate. If you’re a bird, be an early early bird-- But if you’re a worm, sleep late.” ― Shel Silverstein, Where the Sidewalk Ends
          – KannE
          Nov 15 at 3:05






        • 17




          I still prefer the corollary: "But the second mouse gets the cheese..."
          – Darrel Hoffman
          Nov 15 at 16:32










        • And if you want something else for breakfast, get up later.
          – RedSonja
          Nov 16 at 9:14










        • This expresses the corollary of the OP's thought.
          – Andrew Neely
          3 hours ago















        up vote
        15
        down vote














        The early bird gets the worm.




        Whoever arrives at the prize first gets it. (It's implied that slowpokes do not get anything)






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Arcanist Lupus is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.














        • 10




          “EARLY BIRD Oh, if you’re a bird, be an early bird And catch the worm for your breakfast plate. If you’re a bird, be an early early bird-- But if you’re a worm, sleep late.” ― Shel Silverstein, Where the Sidewalk Ends
          – KannE
          Nov 15 at 3:05






        • 17




          I still prefer the corollary: "But the second mouse gets the cheese..."
          – Darrel Hoffman
          Nov 15 at 16:32










        • And if you want something else for breakfast, get up later.
          – RedSonja
          Nov 16 at 9:14










        • This expresses the corollary of the OP's thought.
          – Andrew Neely
          3 hours ago













        up vote
        15
        down vote










        up vote
        15
        down vote










        The early bird gets the worm.




        Whoever arrives at the prize first gets it. (It's implied that slowpokes do not get anything)






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Arcanist Lupus is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.










        The early bird gets the worm.




        Whoever arrives at the prize first gets it. (It's implied that slowpokes do not get anything)







        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Arcanist Lupus is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer






        New contributor




        Arcanist Lupus is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        answered Nov 15 at 2:09









        Arcanist Lupus

        2593




        2593




        New contributor




        Arcanist Lupus is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.





        New contributor





        Arcanist Lupus is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.






        Arcanist Lupus is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.








        • 10




          “EARLY BIRD Oh, if you’re a bird, be an early bird And catch the worm for your breakfast plate. If you’re a bird, be an early early bird-- But if you’re a worm, sleep late.” ― Shel Silverstein, Where the Sidewalk Ends
          – KannE
          Nov 15 at 3:05






        • 17




          I still prefer the corollary: "But the second mouse gets the cheese..."
          – Darrel Hoffman
          Nov 15 at 16:32










        • And if you want something else for breakfast, get up later.
          – RedSonja
          Nov 16 at 9:14










        • This expresses the corollary of the OP's thought.
          – Andrew Neely
          3 hours ago














        • 10




          “EARLY BIRD Oh, if you’re a bird, be an early bird And catch the worm for your breakfast plate. If you’re a bird, be an early early bird-- But if you’re a worm, sleep late.” ― Shel Silverstein, Where the Sidewalk Ends
          – KannE
          Nov 15 at 3:05






        • 17




          I still prefer the corollary: "But the second mouse gets the cheese..."
          – Darrel Hoffman
          Nov 15 at 16:32










        • And if you want something else for breakfast, get up later.
          – RedSonja
          Nov 16 at 9:14










        • This expresses the corollary of the OP's thought.
          – Andrew Neely
          3 hours ago








        10




        10




        “EARLY BIRD Oh, if you’re a bird, be an early bird And catch the worm for your breakfast plate. If you’re a bird, be an early early bird-- But if you’re a worm, sleep late.” ― Shel Silverstein, Where the Sidewalk Ends
        – KannE
        Nov 15 at 3:05




        “EARLY BIRD Oh, if you’re a bird, be an early bird And catch the worm for your breakfast plate. If you’re a bird, be an early early bird-- But if you’re a worm, sleep late.” ― Shel Silverstein, Where the Sidewalk Ends
        – KannE
        Nov 15 at 3:05




        17




        17




        I still prefer the corollary: "But the second mouse gets the cheese..."
        – Darrel Hoffman
        Nov 15 at 16:32




        I still prefer the corollary: "But the second mouse gets the cheese..."
        – Darrel Hoffman
        Nov 15 at 16:32












        And if you want something else for breakfast, get up later.
        – RedSonja
        Nov 16 at 9:14




        And if you want something else for breakfast, get up later.
        – RedSonja
        Nov 16 at 9:14












        This expresses the corollary of the OP's thought.
        – Andrew Neely
        3 hours ago




        This expresses the corollary of the OP's thought.
        – Andrew Neely
        3 hours ago










        up vote
        9
        down vote













        How about




        He who hesitates is lost




        I had to look up the source for this proverb, which seems to be a play:



        https://www.bookbrowse.com/expressions/detail/index.cfm/expression_number/455/he-who-hesitates-is-lost






        share|improve this answer

























          up vote
          9
          down vote













          How about




          He who hesitates is lost




          I had to look up the source for this proverb, which seems to be a play:



          https://www.bookbrowse.com/expressions/detail/index.cfm/expression_number/455/he-who-hesitates-is-lost






          share|improve this answer























            up vote
            9
            down vote










            up vote
            9
            down vote









            How about




            He who hesitates is lost




            I had to look up the source for this proverb, which seems to be a play:



            https://www.bookbrowse.com/expressions/detail/index.cfm/expression_number/455/he-who-hesitates-is-lost






            share|improve this answer












            How about




            He who hesitates is lost




            I had to look up the source for this proverb, which seems to be a play:



            https://www.bookbrowse.com/expressions/detail/index.cfm/expression_number/455/he-who-hesitates-is-lost







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Nov 14 at 22:28









            pbasdf

            872116




            872116






















                up vote
                8
                down vote













                Regarding 'trains' and tardiness...




                That train has left the station.




                (Also, the train instead of that train is said.)



                Broadly defined:




                That opportunity has already passed; that cannot be undone.




                https://www.phrases.net/phrase/that-train-has-left-the-station_20986



                It's similar to this saying--You've missed the boat.--meaning something is already underway, so it's too late to weigh in on that; you've missed your chance to do so or an opportunity in general.



                And regarding the [pooping] ones...



                "[Poop] or get off the pot!" Basic meaning: Quit stalling!



                Get it? Public restroom stalls... Never mind; toilet humor is optional.






                share|improve this answer























                • Isn't 'shit or get off the pot' more about hogging facilities/opportunities and stopping others accessing them? It's akin to 'dog in the manger' in that it is about the result of the shitter/dog being in a place they have no use for as a dog cannot east hay. The idiom the OP is after is about the person's loss being their own fault.
                  – Spagirl
                  Nov 15 at 15:08












                • @Spagirl, I know, some people use it like--My turn!--quite literally in public restrooms sometimes, but it's more about the 'constipated' person wasting time and possibly missing out because of it; it's not really about selfishness, but that's an interesting viewpoint. Which are we more concerned about--the pooper or the pot?--ha-ha. In any case, the poop part is intended to be an aside; that's why no reference is cited for it, but here is one just FYI: en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/….
                  – KannE
                  Nov 15 at 17:25












                • I stand corrected then, that's certainly never been my understanding of the meaning. Every day a school day!
                  – Spagirl
                  Nov 15 at 17:33






                • 1




                  My upvote is for "The train has left the station."
                  – J.R.
                  Nov 16 at 12:28















                up vote
                8
                down vote













                Regarding 'trains' and tardiness...




                That train has left the station.




                (Also, the train instead of that train is said.)



                Broadly defined:




                That opportunity has already passed; that cannot be undone.




                https://www.phrases.net/phrase/that-train-has-left-the-station_20986



                It's similar to this saying--You've missed the boat.--meaning something is already underway, so it's too late to weigh in on that; you've missed your chance to do so or an opportunity in general.



                And regarding the [pooping] ones...



                "[Poop] or get off the pot!" Basic meaning: Quit stalling!



                Get it? Public restroom stalls... Never mind; toilet humor is optional.






                share|improve this answer























                • Isn't 'shit or get off the pot' more about hogging facilities/opportunities and stopping others accessing them? It's akin to 'dog in the manger' in that it is about the result of the shitter/dog being in a place they have no use for as a dog cannot east hay. The idiom the OP is after is about the person's loss being their own fault.
                  – Spagirl
                  Nov 15 at 15:08












                • @Spagirl, I know, some people use it like--My turn!--quite literally in public restrooms sometimes, but it's more about the 'constipated' person wasting time and possibly missing out because of it; it's not really about selfishness, but that's an interesting viewpoint. Which are we more concerned about--the pooper or the pot?--ha-ha. In any case, the poop part is intended to be an aside; that's why no reference is cited for it, but here is one just FYI: en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/….
                  – KannE
                  Nov 15 at 17:25












                • I stand corrected then, that's certainly never been my understanding of the meaning. Every day a school day!
                  – Spagirl
                  Nov 15 at 17:33






                • 1




                  My upvote is for "The train has left the station."
                  – J.R.
                  Nov 16 at 12:28













                up vote
                8
                down vote










                up vote
                8
                down vote









                Regarding 'trains' and tardiness...




                That train has left the station.




                (Also, the train instead of that train is said.)



                Broadly defined:




                That opportunity has already passed; that cannot be undone.




                https://www.phrases.net/phrase/that-train-has-left-the-station_20986



                It's similar to this saying--You've missed the boat.--meaning something is already underway, so it's too late to weigh in on that; you've missed your chance to do so or an opportunity in general.



                And regarding the [pooping] ones...



                "[Poop] or get off the pot!" Basic meaning: Quit stalling!



                Get it? Public restroom stalls... Never mind; toilet humor is optional.






                share|improve this answer














                Regarding 'trains' and tardiness...




                That train has left the station.




                (Also, the train instead of that train is said.)



                Broadly defined:




                That opportunity has already passed; that cannot be undone.




                https://www.phrases.net/phrase/that-train-has-left-the-station_20986



                It's similar to this saying--You've missed the boat.--meaning something is already underway, so it's too late to weigh in on that; you've missed your chance to do so or an opportunity in general.



                And regarding the [pooping] ones...



                "[Poop] or get off the pot!" Basic meaning: Quit stalling!



                Get it? Public restroom stalls... Never mind; toilet humor is optional.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Nov 16 at 15:02

























                answered Nov 15 at 4:38









                KannE

                798114




                798114












                • Isn't 'shit or get off the pot' more about hogging facilities/opportunities and stopping others accessing them? It's akin to 'dog in the manger' in that it is about the result of the shitter/dog being in a place they have no use for as a dog cannot east hay. The idiom the OP is after is about the person's loss being their own fault.
                  – Spagirl
                  Nov 15 at 15:08












                • @Spagirl, I know, some people use it like--My turn!--quite literally in public restrooms sometimes, but it's more about the 'constipated' person wasting time and possibly missing out because of it; it's not really about selfishness, but that's an interesting viewpoint. Which are we more concerned about--the pooper or the pot?--ha-ha. In any case, the poop part is intended to be an aside; that's why no reference is cited for it, but here is one just FYI: en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/….
                  – KannE
                  Nov 15 at 17:25












                • I stand corrected then, that's certainly never been my understanding of the meaning. Every day a school day!
                  – Spagirl
                  Nov 15 at 17:33






                • 1




                  My upvote is for "The train has left the station."
                  – J.R.
                  Nov 16 at 12:28


















                • Isn't 'shit or get off the pot' more about hogging facilities/opportunities and stopping others accessing them? It's akin to 'dog in the manger' in that it is about the result of the shitter/dog being in a place they have no use for as a dog cannot east hay. The idiom the OP is after is about the person's loss being their own fault.
                  – Spagirl
                  Nov 15 at 15:08












                • @Spagirl, I know, some people use it like--My turn!--quite literally in public restrooms sometimes, but it's more about the 'constipated' person wasting time and possibly missing out because of it; it's not really about selfishness, but that's an interesting viewpoint. Which are we more concerned about--the pooper or the pot?--ha-ha. In any case, the poop part is intended to be an aside; that's why no reference is cited for it, but here is one just FYI: en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/….
                  – KannE
                  Nov 15 at 17:25












                • I stand corrected then, that's certainly never been my understanding of the meaning. Every day a school day!
                  – Spagirl
                  Nov 15 at 17:33






                • 1




                  My upvote is for "The train has left the station."
                  – J.R.
                  Nov 16 at 12:28
















                Isn't 'shit or get off the pot' more about hogging facilities/opportunities and stopping others accessing them? It's akin to 'dog in the manger' in that it is about the result of the shitter/dog being in a place they have no use for as a dog cannot east hay. The idiom the OP is after is about the person's loss being their own fault.
                – Spagirl
                Nov 15 at 15:08






                Isn't 'shit or get off the pot' more about hogging facilities/opportunities and stopping others accessing them? It's akin to 'dog in the manger' in that it is about the result of the shitter/dog being in a place they have no use for as a dog cannot east hay. The idiom the OP is after is about the person's loss being their own fault.
                – Spagirl
                Nov 15 at 15:08














                @Spagirl, I know, some people use it like--My turn!--quite literally in public restrooms sometimes, but it's more about the 'constipated' person wasting time and possibly missing out because of it; it's not really about selfishness, but that's an interesting viewpoint. Which are we more concerned about--the pooper or the pot?--ha-ha. In any case, the poop part is intended to be an aside; that's why no reference is cited for it, but here is one just FYI: en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/….
                – KannE
                Nov 15 at 17:25






                @Spagirl, I know, some people use it like--My turn!--quite literally in public restrooms sometimes, but it's more about the 'constipated' person wasting time and possibly missing out because of it; it's not really about selfishness, but that's an interesting viewpoint. Which are we more concerned about--the pooper or the pot?--ha-ha. In any case, the poop part is intended to be an aside; that's why no reference is cited for it, but here is one just FYI: en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/….
                – KannE
                Nov 15 at 17:25














                I stand corrected then, that's certainly never been my understanding of the meaning. Every day a school day!
                – Spagirl
                Nov 15 at 17:33




                I stand corrected then, that's certainly never been my understanding of the meaning. Every day a school day!
                – Spagirl
                Nov 15 at 17:33




                1




                1




                My upvote is for "The train has left the station."
                – J.R.
                Nov 16 at 12:28




                My upvote is for "The train has left the station."
                – J.R.
                Nov 16 at 12:28










                up vote
                4
                down vote













                I've once heard the latin saying :




                Tarde venientibus ossa.




                Those who come late just get the scraps [litt. 'bones'].



                This is admittedly not English, but a reference exists in wikipedia.






                share|improve this answer





















                • My English parents used this saying on me to mean "you are too late and it is your fault". Typically for not getting to the dinner table promptly and the worst I ever actually got was a cold dinner.
                  – Simon G.
                  Nov 15 at 16:19















                up vote
                4
                down vote













                I've once heard the latin saying :




                Tarde venientibus ossa.




                Those who come late just get the scraps [litt. 'bones'].



                This is admittedly not English, but a reference exists in wikipedia.






                share|improve this answer





















                • My English parents used this saying on me to mean "you are too late and it is your fault". Typically for not getting to the dinner table promptly and the worst I ever actually got was a cold dinner.
                  – Simon G.
                  Nov 15 at 16:19













                up vote
                4
                down vote










                up vote
                4
                down vote









                I've once heard the latin saying :




                Tarde venientibus ossa.




                Those who come late just get the scraps [litt. 'bones'].



                This is admittedly not English, but a reference exists in wikipedia.






                share|improve this answer












                I've once heard the latin saying :




                Tarde venientibus ossa.




                Those who come late just get the scraps [litt. 'bones'].



                This is admittedly not English, but a reference exists in wikipedia.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Nov 15 at 15:03









                mcadorel

                1014




                1014












                • My English parents used this saying on me to mean "you are too late and it is your fault". Typically for not getting to the dinner table promptly and the worst I ever actually got was a cold dinner.
                  – Simon G.
                  Nov 15 at 16:19


















                • My English parents used this saying on me to mean "you are too late and it is your fault". Typically for not getting to the dinner table promptly and the worst I ever actually got was a cold dinner.
                  – Simon G.
                  Nov 15 at 16:19
















                My English parents used this saying on me to mean "you are too late and it is your fault". Typically for not getting to the dinner table promptly and the worst I ever actually got was a cold dinner.
                – Simon G.
                Nov 15 at 16:19




                My English parents used this saying on me to mean "you are too late and it is your fault". Typically for not getting to the dinner table promptly and the worst I ever actually got was a cold dinner.
                – Simon G.
                Nov 15 at 16:19










                up vote
                4
                down vote













                @drewhart mentioned "that ship has sailed", but it doesn't really imply fault. However a common variant is "You missed the boat", which does imply that it is your fault in much the same way as the Lithuanian proverb.






                share|improve this answer



















                • 1




                  Yes but neither has any inference of "fault", does it?
                  – Robbie Goodwin
                  yesterday










                • @RobbieGoodwin "That ship has sailed" may not, but "You missed the boat" does. Answer edited, as its a good point.
                  – Paul Johnson
                  24 mins ago















                up vote
                4
                down vote













                @drewhart mentioned "that ship has sailed", but it doesn't really imply fault. However a common variant is "You missed the boat", which does imply that it is your fault in much the same way as the Lithuanian proverb.






                share|improve this answer



















                • 1




                  Yes but neither has any inference of "fault", does it?
                  – Robbie Goodwin
                  yesterday










                • @RobbieGoodwin "That ship has sailed" may not, but "You missed the boat" does. Answer edited, as its a good point.
                  – Paul Johnson
                  24 mins ago













                up vote
                4
                down vote










                up vote
                4
                down vote









                @drewhart mentioned "that ship has sailed", but it doesn't really imply fault. However a common variant is "You missed the boat", which does imply that it is your fault in much the same way as the Lithuanian proverb.






                share|improve this answer














                @drewhart mentioned "that ship has sailed", but it doesn't really imply fault. However a common variant is "You missed the boat", which does imply that it is your fault in much the same way as the Lithuanian proverb.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 20 mins ago

























                answered Nov 17 at 8:51









                Paul Johnson

                1,064413




                1,064413








                • 1




                  Yes but neither has any inference of "fault", does it?
                  – Robbie Goodwin
                  yesterday










                • @RobbieGoodwin "That ship has sailed" may not, but "You missed the boat" does. Answer edited, as its a good point.
                  – Paul Johnson
                  24 mins ago














                • 1




                  Yes but neither has any inference of "fault", does it?
                  – Robbie Goodwin
                  yesterday










                • @RobbieGoodwin "That ship has sailed" may not, but "You missed the boat" does. Answer edited, as its a good point.
                  – Paul Johnson
                  24 mins ago








                1




                1




                Yes but neither has any inference of "fault", does it?
                – Robbie Goodwin
                yesterday




                Yes but neither has any inference of "fault", does it?
                – Robbie Goodwin
                yesterday












                @RobbieGoodwin "That ship has sailed" may not, but "You missed the boat" does. Answer edited, as its a good point.
                – Paul Johnson
                24 mins ago




                @RobbieGoodwin "That ship has sailed" may not, but "You missed the boat" does. Answer edited, as its a good point.
                – Paul Johnson
                24 mins ago










                up vote
                2
                down vote













                If you say




                Too little, too late




                you're "blaming someone for not doing enough to prevent a problem and for taking action only after the problem had become very bad."



                https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/too-little-too-late






                share|improve this answer

























                  up vote
                  2
                  down vote













                  If you say




                  Too little, too late




                  you're "blaming someone for not doing enough to prevent a problem and for taking action only after the problem had become very bad."



                  https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/too-little-too-late






                  share|improve this answer























                    up vote
                    2
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    2
                    down vote









                    If you say




                    Too little, too late




                    you're "blaming someone for not doing enough to prevent a problem and for taking action only after the problem had become very bad."



                    https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/too-little-too-late






                    share|improve this answer












                    If you say




                    Too little, too late




                    you're "blaming someone for not doing enough to prevent a problem and for taking action only after the problem had become very bad."



                    https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/too-little-too-late







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Nov 17 at 7:36









                    DaveBoltman

                    47438




                    47438






















                        up vote
                        0
                        down vote













                        Although not specifically about lateness an Englishman might remind one of the ongoing consequences of a person`s actions by saying "The pigeons have come (or will have come) home to roost.






                        share|improve this answer

























                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          Although not specifically about lateness an Englishman might remind one of the ongoing consequences of a person`s actions by saying "The pigeons have come (or will have come) home to roost.






                          share|improve this answer























                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote









                            Although not specifically about lateness an Englishman might remind one of the ongoing consequences of a person`s actions by saying "The pigeons have come (or will have come) home to roost.






                            share|improve this answer












                            Although not specifically about lateness an Englishman might remind one of the ongoing consequences of a person`s actions by saying "The pigeons have come (or will have come) home to roost.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 5 hours ago









                            Aled Cymro

                            1694




                            1694

















                                protected by tchrist Nov 15 at 20:28



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