Trifle in a sentence as a noun

That said, lack of first class functions in Java isn't a trifle.

Is it a trifle that no insurer would care about?

Recently, some have cleaned up their offers, but you can still bribe the cable tech for a trifle so he unblocks HBO, apparently.

I say I want to buy XYZ, you run in front of me and buy the last XYZ at that price and kindly offer to sell it to me for just a trifle more.

Appealing to "NSA-approved cryptography" in the concluding paragraph is more than a trifle strange.

Before I joined it sometime this year or last, I thought Pinboard seemed like the silliest, most likely-to-peter-out trifle of a service.

If not, isn't it a trifle rude to declare that writing system "unamerican"?What about immigrant languages other than English?

Trifle in a sentence as a verb

The fact is, they have no other attraction or reason for keeping the field than a trifle of stipend, which is not sufficient to make them willing to die for you.

Cosmic-horror stuff about how many stars there are or how many metres you are from the centre of mass of the universe are is just an amusing trifle in comparison.

The only thing that I can think of is that it illustrates the point that there are some who seem to think they have a window into some else's life based on some trifle found on the Internet.

My entire test + build process is:- ~/gocode/src/weak$ go test ./... && go build Go is like a very delicious trifle - the further into it you go, the more delicious things you find.

This is a trifle more manipulative and less straightforward than a decent straightforward honest software engineer would instinctually prefer.

Except to the extent that web apps are a trifle more difficult to find: Instead of finding the pretty icon and touching it, you have to touch Safari and then type the name of your desired app into the Googles.

Trifle definitions

noun

a cold pudding made of layers of sponge cake spread with fruit or jelly; may be decorated with nuts, cream, or chocolate

noun

a detail that is considered insignificant

See also: technicality triviality

noun

something of small importance

See also: triviality trivia

verb

waste time; spend one's time idly or inefficiently

See also: piddle wanton

verb

act frivolously

See also: frivol

verb

consider not very seriously; "He is trifling with her"; "She plays with the thought of moving to Tasmania"

See also: dally play