An example for the use of the idiom 'it's a piece of cake' is: I can run that 100 yard sprint, it'll be a piece of cake'.
Margret couldn't unscrew the jar lid, but I found it a piece of cake.
"A piece of cake" means something is very simple for someone to do. Example: I found chemistry difficult, but for Kris, it was a piece of cake.
ogden Nash wrote it in primrose path 1936 her pictures in the papers now & lifes a piece of cake
Yes, it is an adverbial phrase. The phrase "after all" is an idiom meaning "nevertheless."
An example for the use of the idiom 'it's a piece of cake' is: I can run that 100 yard sprint, it'll be a piece of cake'.
Margret couldn't unscrew the jar lid, but I found it a piece of cake.
"A piece of cake" means something is very simple for someone to do. Example: I found chemistry difficult, but for Kris, it was a piece of cake.
Life Is Sometimes Hard
IT means something easy like the idiom piece of cake
This phrase is of American origin. At least, the earliest citation of it that I can find is from the American poet and humorist Ogden Nash'sPrimrose Path, 1936:"Her picture's in the papers now, And life's a piece of cake."The choice of cake or pie as a symbol of ease and pleasantry is well represented in the language. Other phrases along the same lines include "as easy as pie, or " a cake walk"
He though that climbing the tree would be a piece of cake until he fell out of it and broke his leg.
"A piece of cake" "A cakewalk" "No problem" "Easily done" "A pleasure"
ogden Nash wrote it in primrose path 1936 her pictures in the papers now & lifes a piece of cake
A piece of cake, is to say that something is easy to do. For instance, it is a piece of cake for someone trained in gymnastics to do a somersault.
No, "piece of cake" is an idiom, not a simile. It means that something is very easy to do. A simile is a figure of speech that compares two things using "like" or "as," such as "as brave as a lion."
An idiom is a phrase whose meaning is not easily deduced from the individual words used, often carrying a symbolic or cultural connotation. A descriptive phrase, on the other hand, is simply a phrase that describes something without the use of figurative language.