Put a Band-Aid on It.


πŸ—“οΈ Idiom: Put a Band-Aid on It (v)


πŸ’¬ Meaning

  • To fix a problem quickly without solving the real cause.
  • It means giving a temporary or surface-level solution.

🧠 Example Sentences

  • The developer just put a Band-Aid on the bug instead of fixing the broken logic.
  • Restarting the server helped, but it’s just a Band-Aid. The code needs to be rewritten.
  • They keep putting Band-Aids on the software instead of building a stable system.

πŸ›οΈ Origin

This idiom comes from the brand β€œBand-Aid,” which is used for covering small cuts. In business, it means covering up a problem instead of solving the deeper issue.


πŸ“ Practice Exercises

1. Fill in the blank:

Adding a quick patch to stop the error message is just __________. We need to fix the code properly.

Answer

putting a Band-Aid on it

2. Choose the correct meaning of β€œput a Band-Aid on it”:

A) To fix the root cause of a problem
B) To avoid fixing anything
C) To apply a short-term fix that doesn’t solve the main issue
D) To improve user design

Answer

C) To apply a short-term fix that doesn’t solve the main issue

3. Rewrite the sentence using the idiom:

β€œThey applied a temporary patch, but the system problem is still there.” β†’ Change the sentence using: put a Band-Aid on it

Answer

They put a Band-Aid on it, but the system problem is still there.


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