Idiom for "very little, compared to real value"?
Norwegian has an idiom that means roughly "small change compared to the real cost or value", which would translate literally as "buttons and scraps".
Is there a similar idiom in English?
Some usage examples translated from Norwegian:
- "We cannot accept that our part of the country would be left with [buttons and scraps] while valuable resources disappear before our eyes" (Local politician in a discussion on oil.)
- "Offered [buttons and scraps] - that's why we're going on strike" (Newspaper headline)
- "Unless they are in the porn or games business, media companies must accept that their future income from internet content will remain [buttons and scraps]" (Newspaper opinion piece)
If you are on the buying end the English idiom "for a song" ("I got it for a song") is pretty much the same, but I don't think it can be used in contexts like above.
Is there an idiom that can?
Solution 1:
Some options from a thesaurus (some better than others): peanuts, crumbs, chicken feed, chump change, nickels and dimes, pittance, small potatoes, scraps, drop in the ocean, trifle.
Of these, "peanuts" and "small potatoes" are probably the ones closest to appropriate in your sentences.
Solution 2:
The best I can think of in American English would be "beads and trinkets" (or "trinkets and beads", depending on what sounds best), a reference to the purchase of all of Manhattan Island from a tribe of Indians in exchange for a bunch of low-valued items.