English edit

Noun edit

nugget of truth (plural nuggets of truth)

  1. (idiomatic) A small amount of truth in a generally untrue statement.
    • 1989, Walter A. Goffart, Rome's Fall and After[1], page 59:
      Even in its moderate form, this argument presupposes that factual elements can be plucked out of panegyric as nuggets of truth isolated from the dross of empty verbiage.
    • 2003, Henry Cloud, Making Small Groups Work: What Every Small Group Leader Needs to Know[2], page 286:
      This book identifies twelve teachings that sound plausible because they each contain a nugget of truth.
    • 2008 January, “Clinton's Hispanic edge over Obama”, in Chicago Tribune[3]:
      Unfortunately, there is a nugget of truth to the notion of black and Hispanic tensions but, like politics, the friction tends to be very local.

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