take the brunt of something

take the brunt of something
bear/take/the brunt of something phrase
to receive the worst part of something that has a bad effect

It was the capital that bore the brunt of the recent flooding.

Thesaurus: miscellaneous bad thingshyponym disappointmentssynonym
Main entry: brunt

* * *

bear, take, etc. the ˈbrunt of sth idiom
to receive the main force of sth unpleasant

Schools will bear the brunt of cuts in government spending.

Main entry:bruntidiom

Useful english dictionary. 2012.

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  • take the brunt of something — bear/take the brunt of (something) to receive the worst part of something unpleasant or harmful, such as an attack. The oldest parts of the town bore the brunt of the missile attacks …   New idioms dictionary

  • take the brunt of — bear/take the brunt of (something) to receive the worst part of something unpleasant or harmful, such as an attack. The oldest parts of the town bore the brunt of the missile attacks …   New idioms dictionary

  • bear the brunt of something — bear/take/the brunt of something phrase to receive the worst part of something that has a bad effect It was the capital that bore the brunt of the recent flooding. Thesaurus: miscellaneous bad thingshyponym disappointmentssynonym …   Useful english dictionary

  • bear the brunt of something — bear/take the brunt of (something) to receive the worst part of something unpleasant or harmful, such as an attack. The oldest parts of the town bore the brunt of the missile attacks …   New idioms dictionary

  • bear the brunt of — bear/take the brunt of (something) to receive the worst part of something unpleasant or harmful, such as an attack. The oldest parts of the town bore the brunt of the missile attacks …   New idioms dictionary

  • take the spear (in one’s chest) — tv. to accept full blame for something; to accept the full brunt of the punishment for something. □ The Admiral got the short straw and had to take the spear in his chest. □ I sure didn’t want to take the spear …   Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • brunt — [ brʌnt ] noun the brunt the worst part of something that has a bad effect: bear/take the brunt of something: The Education Department is expected to bear the brunt of these cuts in funding. The eastern area took the brunt of the storm. It was… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • brunt — UK [brʌnt] / US noun Word forms brunt : singular brunt plural brunts bear/take the brunt of something to receive the worst part of something that has a bad effect It was the capital that bore the brunt of the recent flooding …   English dictionary

  • brunt — [[t]brʌ̱nt[/t]] PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR of n To bear the brunt or take the brunt of something unpleasant means to suffer the main part or force of it. Young people are bearing the brunt of unemployment... A child s head tends to take the… …   English dictionary

  • take it on the chin — {v. phr.}, {informal} 1. To be badly beaten or hurt. * /Our football team really took it on the chin today. They are all bumps and bruises./ * /Mother and I took it on the chin in the card game./ 2. To accept without complaint something bad that… …   Dictionary of American idioms

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