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12 Answers
- Anonymous1 decade agoFavourite answer
The original saying was ...'as long as a donkey's ears' this was corrupted to 'donkey's years'
- debzcLv 51 decade ago
They tend to live longer than horses. Their lifespan can be 30 - 40 years, hence the old term 'donkeys years', as it goes back to the days when donkeys and horses were used for general work.
- 1 decade ago
The donkey, with a life span longer that a horse,is related to the wild, and is believed to have been domesticated about 5,000 years ago in Egypt.(Donkeys Years Ago).An excellent pack animal..
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- 1 decade ago
as other people have mentioned, donkeys generally do live longer than horses, many horses go on well in to their late 20's & it is not uncommon for a donkey to live in to their 40's. I believe the oldest living horse in the UK until recently (it died!) was 54 years old, which was a fat native pony. Thoroughbreds generally don't live as long as native breeds.
- ?Lv 45 years ago
This is an example of an expression that has altered its spelling over time. "Not for donkey's ears" means not for a very long time and refers to the length of a donkey's ears. However, they gradually stretched from the "donkey" and turned "ears" into "years". The meaning of the expression is the same, if it does make rather less sense than the original.
- 1 decade ago
yeah they do live for very long a bout 30-40 years dats why they say donkeys years ago
- Anonymous1 decade ago
No but they don't have good memories, either. Donkeys years are just a way of saying that you can't remember how long it was.
- Anonymous7 years ago
yes. some live up to 40 years