[ US /ˈsmɪdʒən/ ]
[ UK /smˈɪd‍ʒən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a tiny or scarcely detectable amount
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How To Use smidgen In A Sentence

  • She lends the film much-needed plausibility, despite nagging doubts that she is a smidgen too old to be playing such roles.
  • Each was bound along the left ledge with the kind of rubbery glue used to bind a pad of writing paper and featured jokes and an occasional smidgen of story.
  • Or will God smite them down for partaking in a worldly activity while giving it a smidgen of godliness like those "collectible" coins coated with a veneer of "pure 24k gold!"? The Bilerico Project
  • The book is all songs and vignettes, with the odd crumb of action or smidgen of spoken words.
  • The Banoffee Pie was a small disc of salty-sweet crumbs, topped with a smidgen of toffee and banana under a voluminous cloud of piped cream.
  • Believe it, or believe it not, but I have a smidgen of sympathy with the three Plaid Cymru MPs who were today found guilty of improperly using their Parliamentary Allowances by the Parliamentary Commissioner for standards, Sir Phillip Mawer. Stealing from the Taxpayer.
  • The name is deceptive because this dish isn't tofu at all but consists of cream cheese cubes topped with green onions and bonito flakes and is eaten with a smidgen of wasabi.
  • Though made from an odd array of ingredients including a smidgen of potato flour, they did taste vaguely like French fries.
  • There are no smidgens in my family: there are dollops, handfuls, and globs.
  • At the top of the marquee, Hugh himself experienced a smidgen of unease. JUST BETWEEN US
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