Kill two birds with one stone

Origin of: Kill two birds with one stone

Kill two birds with one stone

Achieve two objectives with one strategy or action. Thomas Hobbes is certainly credited with one of the first appearances of the expression in English in 1656, “kill two birds with one stone, and satisfy two arguments with one answer” but some sources maintain that similar expressions existed in Latin, long before Hobbes, so the concept itself may be much older.