This a common metaphor that compares a piece of cake and an easy task.
signed, El Paulson
"a piece of cake"
The boy found the project to be a piece of cake because it was incredibly easy.
The term is 'piece of cake.' It means that something is very easy to do. ex. 'That exam today was a piece of cake.'
It is a piece of cake
Because they are using a common metaphor that compares a piece of cake and an easy task.
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.
Just means it is an easy task. One might be asked if he can do a certain task, and that person feels he can do that task with no problem might say, "It's a piece of cake, no problem!"Just means it is an easy task. One might be asked if he can do a certain task, and that person feels he can do that task with no problem might say, "It's a piece of cake, no problem!"Just means it is an easy task. One might be asked if he can do a certain task, and that person feels he can do that task with no problem might say, "It's a piece of cake, no problem!"Just means it is an easy task. One might be asked if he can do a certain task, and that person feels he can do that task with no problem might say, "It's a piece of cake, no problem!"Just means it is an easy task. One might be asked if he can do a certain task, and that person feels he can do that task with no problem might say, "It's a piece of cake, no problem!"Just means it is an easy task. One might be asked if he can do a certain task, and that person feels he can do that task with no problem might say, "It's a piece of cake, no problem!"
IT means something easy like the idiom piece of cake
There are several terms that mean easy. Easy as pie is one expression. The image is that making a pie is simple -- just toss some fruit on top of a crust and bake. Another expression is piece of cake -- again, the image is one of a dessert. Cake is fun to eat, so something that is a piece of cake would be fun and easy. Children often say "easy peasy" as a rhyming idiom. Some examples would be "That math problem was a piece of cake!," or "Riding a bike is easy as pie."
"Piece of cake" is used here as a term meaning the test was very easy for Ahmed.
"Piece of cake" means simple and easy.
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"