"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.
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'.
yes
Margret couldn't unscrew the jar lid, but I found it a piece of cake.
RAF slang of WW2, meaning it's very easy.
ogden Nash wrote it in primrose path 1936 her pictures in the papers now & lifes a piece of cake
Life Is Sometimes Hard
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'.
"A piece of cake" "A cakewalk" "No problem" "Easily done" "A pleasure"
yes
Margret couldn't unscrew the jar lid, but I found it a piece of cake.
IT means something easy like the idiom piece of cake
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, 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.
"Piece of cake" is used here as a term meaning the test was very easy for Ahmed.
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."
I turned off the flame on the gas stove.I turned off from my boyfriend's sexual advances.Literal just means that what you read actually happened. Figurative means that it is an idiom or slang, that it didn't actually happen.He kicked the bucket. The literal meaning is that he kicked a bucket. The figurative meaning is that he died.That's a piece of cake. The literal meaning is that it is a slice of cake. The figurative meaning is that it is something easy to do.
RAF slang of WW2, meaning it's very easy.