thin edge of the wedge

English edit

Noun edit

thin edge of the wedge

  1. Alternative form of thin end of the wedge
    • 1877, The Analyst, page 381:
      But the great difficulty was the getting in the thin edge of the wedge; when once they had anything to do with price they must apply it to everything.
    • 1903, Albert Shaw, The American Monthly Review of Reviews, page 196:
      But at last the thin edge of the wedge of reform had been pushed in.
    • 1996, Dale Belman et al., Public Sector Employment in a Time of Transition, page 247:
      the thin edge of the wedge was further widened by the fact that a socialist party [...] broke precedent [...].