a piece of cake

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Eman.J.T

Member
Joined
Nov 30, 2012
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Arabic
Home Country
Palestinian Territory
Current Location
Jordan
Hi everyone,

is the use of the idiom a piece of cake correct in the following sentence:

[FONT=&quot]I cried and cried and cried, till I reached a moment when I decided I MUST – no choice - promise myself to stop whining, grow up, deal with it, and fight forward. It’s not a piece of cake, it’s a life, my life[/FONT][FONT=&quot]. However, it’s a new one now.

Thank you.
[/FONT]
 
It might possibly be more commonly said for the second sentence. "Life is not a piece of cake; but this is my life - and a new one for me now." (or something like that).

Usually "a piece of cake" is a modifier of a specific kind of noun - like, my job is a piece of cake; or her life is a piece of cake; or their work is a piece of cake - denoting something is easy. A similar phrase is "easy as pie" ...
 
Something is a piece of cake.
 
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