Break the back of Meaning in English
expression
Definition
To finish the hardest or most challenging part of a task or problem, making the rest much easier to complete.
Usage & Nuances
This is an idiomatic, semi-formal expression. Commonly used in work, school, or project contexts. Often followed by 'the project', 'the job', or similar. Not used for physical breaking. Related but not identical to 'get over the hump' or 'overcome the barrier'.
Example Sentences
We've broken the back of this assignment, so the rest should be easy.
basic
If we can break the back of the paperwork, we can relax.
basic
They finally broke the back of the project after months of hard work.
basic
We just need to break the back of this last task, then we can call it a day.
natural
Once you break the back of learning the basics, the rest comes naturally.
natural
After fixing the major bug, we've broken the back of the software update.
natural