embarrassment of riches
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From John Ozell's 1738 translation of a French play, L'Embarras des richesses (1726) by Léonor Jean Christine Soulas d'Allainval.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]embarrassment of riches (plural embarrassments of riches)
- (idiomatic) An abundance or overabundance of something; too much of a good thing.
- 1908, Myrtle Reed, chapter 23, in Flower of the Dusk:
- Roger was in the library, trying to choose, from an embarrassment of riches, the ten of his father's books which he was to be permitted to take to the city.
- 2006 January 8, Daniel Ginsberg, “Opera in Berlin: A Staat of Flux”, in Washington Post, page N06:
- What might be an embarrassment of riches—a city with three independent and artistically distinct opera companies—may become a lose-lose-lose situation.
Translations
[edit]too much of a good thing
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