meat on the bones
English
    
    Noun
    
meat on the bones (uncountable)
- (idiomatic, often preceded by put) A substantial addition to or augmentation of the content of something, especially something which is unfinished or incomplete.
-  2009 October 11, Ashley Seager, “Has Darling or Osborne the best plan for cutting the deficit?”, in Guardian, UK, retrieved 12 June 2022:- The Conservatives finally put some meat on the bones of their plans at their annual conference last week.
 
-  2014 June 16, Allison Stewart, “Music: 'Ultraviolence' is the set of songs Lana Del Rey was invented to sing”, in Washington Post, retrieved 12 June 2022:- Co-producer Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys puts meat on the bones of songs that often feel like little more than drowsily repeated phrases.
 
- 2020 April 28, Robert Benzie, "Doug Ford promises more details this week," The Star (Toronto, Canada) (retrieved 12 June 2022):
- As Premier Doug Ford scrambles to put some meat on the bones of his vague plan for reopening the economy, he’s asking businesses to suggest regulatory shortcuts.
 
 
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See also
    
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