A whole new can of worms from my dictionary means: A very complicated situation that causes a lot of problems when you start to deal with it: For example, I just don't know what to do - every solution I can think of would just open up a whole new can of worms; and given the example, the idiom phrase normally goes along with the phrasal verb "to open up".
The Renaissance was a time of an explosion of free thought and creativity. It opened up the possibility that there was a whole new world out there.
Opened up a whole new world by proving that the world was not flat and finding new lands and people to exploit.
A complex unexpected problem or unsolvable dilemma, as in Tackling the budget cuts is sure to open a can of worms. This expression alludes to a container of bait used for fishing, which when opened reveals an inextricable tangle of worms. [1920s]
to open up a can of worms means to bring even more problems to be dealt with than there were before. The can of worms is a new set of issues.
The new store Aeropostle opened for kids is called Aeropostle P.S for kids .
migration to the new territory
To be fair, trolling existed long before the internet; we just called it "bullying" and "harassment" then. I mean, we still call it bullying and harassment, but the Internet opened up a whole new way for people to be awful to one another.
There is no law against dating. However, if they do anything more than hold hands, you open up a whole 'nother can of worms.
the unconscious
the unconscious
unconcious
The Ellis Island Immigration Station on Ellis Island opened on January 1, 1892.