A Fig For Such Love

A fig for such love is an idiom meaning the love is worthless or insignificant, akin to "I don't care a fig." It historically signifies the contempt for empty, fruitless or insincere affection - much like a tree with leaves but no fruits. It is shallow show rather than true devotion. A famous line in Shakespeare's Othello
(Act 1 scene 3) spoken by Iago, the villain "Virtue? A fig?" Here he dismisses the idea that morality or goodness controls our destiny.


Derived from an old expression where a fig implies worthlessness, it had been used in literature to express disdain. 

Imagery of fig tree with only leaves represents the lack of expected results. 

"Strangler fig" means taking resources without giving back. 

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