bare bones
English
editEtymology
editBy metaphor with the skeleton versus the whole body including the flesh.
Noun
edit- The essential elements of something; the minimum viable set of elements; especially when they are described without going into detail.
- He had only been taught the bare bones of the system, but carried on regardless.
- 1982 April 10, Michael Bronski, “We Are How We Cook”, in Gay Community News, page 7:
- The bare bones of a cookbook are its recipes, but as a genre it is so elastic and malleable that it can contain a range of other purposes and dimensions.
Related terms
editSee also
edit- skeleton (essentials)
- skeletonized