English, asked by Sid2005, 1 year ago

expansion of idea on storm in a teacup​

Answers

Answered by PravinRatta
1

Storm in a teacup refers to excitement and commotion created by someone over trivial matters. It's something that people exaggerate about.

It refers to how we will react if a big storm cannot be created in a small teacup. We will not get scared.

This is referred to as the tempest in a Teapot by the Americans.

Answered by Arslankincsem
1

A storm in a teacup is an idiom in English language.

It means a lopsided response of indignation, concern, or disappointment over some minor or inconsequential issue. If that you state that a circumstance is a storm in a teacup, you mean individuals are exceptionally disturbed or irritated about something that isn't at exceedingly essential and will before long be overlooked.

There is an North American variant of this idiom. It is ‘tempest in a teapot’.’

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