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When one problem is added to the previous one

English Language Learners Asked on December 21, 2021

Let’s assume someone has a big problem and is dealing with it. While he/she has not solved the first problem, another problem comes up and adds to the previous one. I wonder how you would explain this situation through an idiom / an expression or even a proverb in current English?

I know the expression: "double whammy", but it indicates two problem "at the same time", while I need to indicate that while the first (often big) problem has not solved yet, another (often big) problem appears.

3 Answers

"Another nail in the coffin" might be the expression you are looking for

Answered by Renee on December 21, 2021

If it's not one thing, it's another.

From The Idioms:

if it’s not one thing, it’s the other

also if it’s not one thing, it’s another or it’s one thing after another

Meaning:

  • everything is going wrong
  • bad things keep happening
  • face many problems in succession

Answered by Jason Bassford on December 21, 2021

It never rains but it pours

it never rains but it pours C.E.D. UK saying (According to C.E.D. the U.S. version is when it rains, it pours) ​ said when one bad thing happens, followed by a lot of other bad things that make a bad situation worse

Answered by Brad on December 21, 2021

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