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feet of clay
noun
a weakness or hidden flaw in the character of a greatly admired or respected person.
He was disillusioned to find that even Lincoln had feet of clay.
any unexpected or critical fault.
feet of clay
People are said to have “feet of clay” if they are revealed to have a weakness or flaw that most people were unaware of: “When the coach was arrested for drunken driving, the students realized that their hero had feet of clay.”
Word History and Origins
Origin of feet of clay1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
The place that looks like an eternal fortress turns out to have feet of clay — and I mean that literally, as you will see.
It doesn’t appear that Sequoia or the other investors asked the fundamental questions about FTX that would have revealed its feet of clay.
He came to recognize the justices’ “feet of clay,” their human appetites and frailties.
Part of what remains invisible — in addition to the 300 feet of clay pipe installed by Metabolic Studio — is the original riverbed.
"The economic recovery, which is built on feet of clay, is thus beginning to falter," the survey said.
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