

Someone who comes from a developed country is considered to be someone with good intentions.
Anyone unfamiliar with the biology of the venomous Portuguese man-of-war would likely mistake it for a jellyfish.
Not only is it not a jellyfish, it's not even an "it," but a "they." The Portuguese man-of-war is a siphonophore, an animal made up of a colony of organisms working together. It gets its name from the uppermost polyp, a gas-filled bladder, or pneumatophore, which sits above the water and somewhat resembles an old warship at full sail.
In matters of the heart – and trouser – the Frenchman excels.
He makes the Italian look oily, the Spaniard crude, the Brit not even a player.