045pill
sugar the pill
sweeten the pill
sugar-coat the pill
If you sugar the pill or sweeten the pill, you try to make bad news or an unpleasant situation more acceptable for someone by giving them or telling them something good or pleasant at the same time. These forms of the expression are used in British English; in American English, the usual form is sugar-coat the pill.
Ministers may reprieve Harefield hospital, the world's leading heart transplant centre, to sugar the pill of a further of hospital cuts and closures in London and the South-east.
Actors -- even the most famous -- are often insecure and, anyway, we all thrive on encouragement. A few words of praise help to sweeten the pill of criticism.
His bitter pill was sugar-coated with a promise of `free and fair' elections.
These expressions are often varied.
The appalling timing of that which brought an instant end to so many promotion and relegation issues and the disappearance at short notice of three has brought the game's followers to an anger rarely equalled. Now comes the sugared pill in the shape of the Conference, and not surprisingly Geoff Highfield's was not prepared to swallow it.
All that about Canal and our `mutual' concerns was nothing, of course, but sugar-coating meant to ease the pill down his throat.
swallow a bitter pill
a bitter pill to swallow
If someone has to swallow a bitter pill, they have to accept a difficult or unpleasant fact or situation.
Mr Major Pounds 76,234 hopes that with Ministers taking a lead in the bid to keep down wages, the nation can be persuaded to swallow the bitter pill.
Gordon Hodgson, Cowie's chief executive, said the failure to win was `a little bit of a bitter pill to swallow'.
New music is no longer a bitter pill that must be swallowed before we can wallow in old favourites.
You can also refer to a difficult or unpleasant fact or situation which you have to accept as a bitter pill.
I'm not going to tell you this is not a bitter pill for the armed forces, because clearly it is.
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