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  1. The idiom shooting fish in a barrel paints a vivid picture of a situation that requires so little effort that it almost feels like an unfair advantage. This expression encapsulates tasks or actions that present minimal challenge or resistance, often to the point of absurdity.

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  2. Learn the meaning and origin of the idiom shooting fish in a barrel, which means extremely easy or not difficult at all. See how to use it in positive and negative contexts with examples from Writing Explained.

  3. Ridiculously easy, as in Setting up a computer nowadays is like shooting fish in a barrel. This hyperbolic expression alludes to the fact that fish make an easy target inside a barrel (as opposed to swimming freely in the sea). [Early 1900s] See also: barrel, fish, like, shoot.

  4. Learn the meaning and origin of the simile "like shooting fish in a barrel", which means something is easy to do. Find out how this phrase was tested by MythBusters and see examples of similar expressions.

  5. Learn the meaning and origin of the idiom like shooting fish in a barrel, which means ridiculously easy. Find synonyms, quizzes, and examples of this expression.

  6. something is like shooting fish in a barrel. said to mean that one side in a battle or contest is so much stronger than the other that the weaker side has no chance at all of winning. I heard one case where some of the enemy soldiers had come out and they were saying it was like shooting fish in a barrel.

  7. Idiom: Shooting fish in a barrel. Meaning: If something is like shooting fish in a barrel, it is so easy that success is almost guaranteed. Example: "For my first exam I was really nervous and worried that it would be too difficult for me, but it was actually as easy as shooting fish in a barrel!"