bitter pill to swallow
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]bitter pill to swallow (plural bitter pills to swallow)
- (figurative) Something unpleasant that must be accepted or endured.
- Synonyms: difficult pill to swallow, hard pill to swallow, tough pill to swallow
- Hypernym: pill to swallow
- 1886, George Gissing, chapter 10, in Demos: A Story of English Socialism:
- [T]o see himself dethroned, the object of her contempt, was a bitter pill to swallow.
- 1920 May 1, “Amundsen to Try Again for Pole”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
- "[W]e cast loose from the ice after a very careful inspection which left us no hope whatsoever of penetrating it. […] It was a bitter pill to swallow, but we decided to search for Winter quarters somewhere along the coast."
- 2006 June 26, Tony Karon, “Inside Iraq's 'Amnesty' Plan”, in Time[2], archived from the original on 2010-09-03:
- Giving them amnesty would be a bitter pill for the U.S. to swallow.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see bitter pill, swallow.
Usage notes
[edit]- Bitter pill(s) to swallow is not a set phrase. Only a little more than 40% of the usage at COCA with a form of swallow within 9 words before or after is of the form given.
- Other verbs such as take, down, and digest may replace swallow.
- About one third of the time bitter pill appears without any such verb nearby.
- Other adjectives modify pill about 60% of the time: hard, tough, bad, difficult, even easy.