English Language & Usage Asked on September 3, 2021
In this sentence:
His deteriorating health, poverty and persecution by the authorities, all this was but a small part of the trials he had to endure in those years.
I wonder if there is any idiom that could liven this sentence. Looking on the internet I found the expression a drop in a bucket (Cambridge), meaning "small part of a bigger whole", but it doesn’t really fit in my sentence and it is not very elegant either. I would need something more formal and it can be poetic, too. It must integrate well in the structure of the given sentence.
This was merely/just/but the tip of the iceberg.
The idiom tip of the iceberg basically means the small part of a much larger situation or problem that remains hidden. When only a part of something that can be easily observed, but not the rest of it, we say that the part is just the tip of the iceberg.
[MissouriStateEducation: Idiom]
Answered by Edwin Ashworth on September 3, 2021
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