A Pandoras Box


🗓️ Idiom: A Pandora’s Box (n)


💬 Meaning

  • A situation that, once started, can reveal or cause many other problems.
  • Something that seems small but leads to big difficulties.

🧠 Example Sentences

  • Changing the company’s policies without careful planning opened a Pandora’s box of complaints.
  • Revealing confidential information at the meeting could open a Pandora’s box for the management team.
  • Introducing new regulations without clear guidelines might turn out to be a Pandora’s box for the industry.

🏛️ Origin

This idiom comes from an ancient Greek myth where Pandora opened a box (actually a jar) releasing all the world’s troubles. It now means starting something that causes many unexpected problems.


📝 Practice Exercises

1. Fill in the blank:
Changing the budget rules without discussion could open ________ for the company.

Answer

a Pandora’s box

2. Multiple choice:
What does “Pandora’s box” mean?
a) A helpful tool
b) Something that causes many problems
c) A surprise gift

Answer

b) Something that causes many problems

3. Change the sentence using ” a Pandora’s box”:
“Starting the investigation caused many unexpected issues.”

Answer

Starting the investigation opened a Pandora’s box.


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