take the edge off



take the edge off

 ((of) something)
1. Lit. to dull a blade. (Of is usually retained before pronouns.) Cutting hard stuff like that will take the edge off your knife blade.
2. Fig. to decrease the effect of something; to make something less blunt, critical, etc. (Of is usually retained before pronouns.) He did not mean to insult the guest, and he quickly thought of something to say that would take the edge off his remark. Her comments were quite cruel, and nothing could be said to take the edge off of them.
See also: edge, off, take

take the edge off something

to reduce the effect of something, esp. something unpleasant Ceiling fans can take the edge off summer heat. The memorial service didn't bring my husband back to life, but it took the edge off my sorrow.
See also: edge, off, take

take the edge off something

to make something unpleasant have less of an effect on someone Have an apple. It'll take the edge off your hunger for a while. His apology took the edge off her anger.
See lose edge
See also: edge, off, take

take the edge off

Ease or assuage, make less severe, as in That snack took the edge off our hunger, or Her kind manner took the edge off her refusal. This term alludes to blunting the edge of a cutting instrument. Shakespeare used it figuratively in The Tempest (4:1): "To take away the edge of that day's celebration." The precise wording of the idiom dates from the first half of the 1900s.
See also: edge, off, take

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Aamina-Arabic
Agustina-Spanish
Iuvenalis-Ancient Roman
Tarotah-ṙo:Japanese
ZalmonZAL-mən (English)Biblical
Meeks[mi:ks]