Get Free Checker

smidge

[ UK /smˈɪd‍ʒ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a tiny or scarcely detectable amount

How To Use smidge In A Sentence

  • When contemporary historians look back on Genoa in 20 years' time, will they find a smidgen of significance in these events?
  • But even in unadjusted dollars, the level of tech outlays has recovered all but a smidgen of the losses suffered during the recession.
  • So: a big dollop of cadmium green squeezed from the tube, a little chromium oxide green, a smidgeon of cobalt blue, a hint of hansa yellow pale to balance it, some titanium white to lighten it. Creative Control - Part 5
  • Perhaps the sense of proportion is a smidgeon out, but there are quivers in Lib Dem voices suggesting that the Tories may be about to call the whole thing off. AV battle dragged the coalition to the edge of a precipice
  • Von Storch has sunk nearly $100,000 of his own money into producing a pilot titled "Complicated Order," which paints von Storch as a prototypical Bravo-ready diva -- driven, a smidge catty, exuding wealth, surrounded by insane employees -- who is building an empire in a cosmopolitan, nonfederal version of Washington. D.C. developer David von Storch is pumped to take fitness centers to a new level
  • smidgeon" -- of mass transit aid for subsidies for welfare. Press Briefing By Mike Mccurry
  • But for investors with a smidgeon of social conscience, the fund should prove irresistible. Globe and Mail
  • Firstly, it makes working in a group a smidgen easier if you avoid walking in declaring your upmost respect... for yourself. Kristen Durkin: Life Lessons Learned from American Idol: Group Work Hurts
  • COme on Smidge the pervert is on the other side of people. Your Right Hand Thief
  • And don't expect your cholesterol to drop one iota from the smidgen of soy protein that breakfast cereal adds.
View all