The phrase "easy as pie" means that something is very simple or effortless to do, just like eating a delicious pie.
like pecause of cake but slice of pie mean something that's Easy
metaphoreit taking something totally different and compares it to somethingAnother response:The phrase "as easy as pie" means that whatever being described is very simple to do. The saying originated in the previous century when nearly all American homemakers baked pies almost every day, so that the chore was so familiar it could be done without effort.
Easy as Pie - song - was created in 1975.
Easy as Pie - album - was created in 1976.
simileThe phrase "as American as apple pie" is an example of both a simile and an expression.
It was easy , effortless
"Porque" means "because" in Spanish. When combined with "pie", it creates the phrase "porque sí", which translates to "just because" or "because yes".
it means stay cool and take it easy
Easy as Pie - Gary Burton album - was created in 1981.
Please provide the phrase or sentence that you would like me to analyze or explain in more detail.
MeaningVery easy.OriginThere are many similes in English that have the form 'as X as Y' (see this list). These almost always highlight some property - X, and give an example of something that is well-known to display that property - Y. For example, 'as white as snow', 'as dead as a dodo' and, risking a group slander action from our noble friends, 'as drunk as a lord'.How though, are pies thought to be easy? It seems that, while not being easy to make, pies are generally thought to be easy to eat. At least, that was the view in 19th century America, where this phrase was coined. There are various mid 19th century US citations that, whilst not using 'as easy as pie' verbatim, do point to 'pie' being used to denote pleasantry and ease. For example, the related phrase 'as nice as pie' was used in Which: Right or Left? in 1855:"For nearly a week afterwards, the domestics observed significantly to each other, that Miss Isabella was as 'nice as pie!'"In The Adventures Huckleberry Finn, 1884, Mark Twain twice uses 'pie' in that same context:"You're always as polite as pie to them.""So he took him to his own house, and dressed him up clean and nice,... and was just old pie to him, so to speak."Pie was also used at that time for something that was easy to accomplish. For example, The US magazine Sporting Life, May 1886:"As for stealing second and third, it's like eating pie."For the source and more detailed information concerning your request, click on the related links section indicated below.
The phrase 'A walk in the park' means something is going to be really easy e.g. Passing that test will be a walk in the park means that passing that test will be really easy