In like a lion, out like a lamb.” Since we’ve finally almost reached that fabled calendrical turning point in the middle of the month, I thought I’d put together a playlist that goes in like a lion ...
It was first recorded in a 1624 play by John Fletcher, “A Wife for a Month,” where a character says “I would choose March, for I would come in like a lion.” According to the Farmers’ Almanac, the ...
Legend holds that the month of March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb. In the District, Saturday confirmed the ...
I will never forget the blizzard which suddenly hit the Thumb area on April 3, 1975, directly after a warm 70 degrees and ...
They say March comes ‘in like a lion, out like a lamb,’ but where did this phrase come from? The WGN Morning News team also discusses spring cleaning, feet exercise, and blooming ...
March has a lot of history, hope and lore associated with it. For some superstitious folks, “Beware the Ides of March,” a ...
March, so the adage goes, “comes in like a lion, out like a lamb.” March, however, is a fickle month and doesn’t always ...
The old saying that March comes like a lion and leaves like a lamb usually holds true, but this year, only time will tell.
Allison Thompson of The Money Farm looks at whether grain markets will go "in like a lamb and out like a lion" in March 2025.
After a cooler start to March, we’ll warm up quite nicely today! High pressure continues to influence us, giving winds out of the south-southwest. Plenty of blue skies remain in the forecast ...