small change

small change

1. Various coins of minimal value, as might be kept in a pocket, wallet, purse, etc.; loose change. I hate carrying small change around with me, so I always empty whatever's in my pocket into a big jar as soon as I get home. I scraped together enough small change from around the house to go out and have a cup of coffee with my friend.
2. A minimal, insignificant, or inconsequential amount of money; something that costs that amount. I don't feel bad about taking office supplies home with me. For such a huge company, stuff like that is just small change. I nearly gag when I have to pay hundreds of dollars for plane tickets to Europe, but it's small change to my wealthy brother-in-law.
3. A weak, insignificant, or unimportant person or thing. A: "What are your thoughts on Mr. Bradley's comments?" B: "The guy's small change, so I haven't really given them any attention at all." For all their talk, the government's plan to address the housing crisis appears to be nothing but small change.
See also: change, small
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

small change

Fig. an insignificant person. (Also a rude term of address.) Look, small change, why don't you just move along? The guy you think is small change happens to own this building you seem to be guarding so well.
See also: change, small
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

small change

n. an insignificant person. (Also a rude term of address.) The guy you think is small change happens to own this building you seem to be guarding so well.
See also: change, small
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • go through the change
  • change is the only constant in life
  • constant
  • the damage is done
  • evolve
  • quite a change
  • the change (of life)
  • the change of life
  • change of life
  • change
References in periodicals archive
Al Shamsi said it was not only the small shops that do not have small change but even some banks across the country as revealed by reports in local newspapers.
? For more information about the Small Change Big Difference(r) scheme and the Charitable Foundation visit www.ybs.co.uk/charitablefoundation
The Charitable Foundation is funded through the Small Change Big Difference(r) scheme where members donate the pennies from the annual interest on their accounts to help charities and good causes.
Readers ready for positive change will find Small Change, Big Results: How Simple Actions Can Reshape Your Life the best place to begin.
Synopsis: "Small Change, Big Gains: Reflections of an Energy Entrepreneur" introduces climate change economics and provides recommendations on how to develop feasible pathways to a sustainable energy future.
Therefore, one small change that can have a big effect for marketers is to communi- cate the desirable action of many similar others.
The study fits within a constellation of other work by Wansink and others offering insights about how health behaviors can be manipulated by small changes, such as putting the most healthful foods first in a display or using a smaller dinner plate.( ANI )
One small change makes a big difference and changes a lot more than your clothes
Neil Gregory, Woolton branch manager, said: "Pennies make pounds and small change can make a big difference to local charities.
Hilton Worldwide, a subsidiary of the Blackstone Group (NYSE: BX) and a US-based hospitality company, has announced a 'Small Change, Big Difference' campaign at its participant properties in Greece.
George Selgin (2009) offers a challenge to 100 percent reserve money with the problem of small change. He observes that transaction costs will rise and economic activity will be reduced if there is a limited amount of small change.
DLANDERS are being urged to dig out their small change and donate it to charity.
Small Change: Money, Political Parties, and Campaign Finance Reform
The effort urges consumers to make one small change that will improve the health of their mouths.
This remark shows that, for risk-neutral buyers and risk-averse sellers, (1) if q [less than or equal to] p, then the bargaining condition (2) holds; (2) if q > p, then bargaining condition depends on q/p and the ratio of the small change rate to the large change rate of seller's utility; and (3) the greater, w, the default loss, the easier the bargaining.