sticking point
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++ˈsticking ˌpoint noun [singular] PROBLEMsomething that a group of people cannot agree on and that stops them from making progress 〔进程中的〕症结,障碍 North Korea’s refusal had long been a sticking point. 朝鲜的拒绝一直是症结所在。
Examples from the Corpus
sticking point• Trade is a sticking point, particularly when it comes to trucks.• Reforming health care is one of the key sticking points in the budget negotiations.• Negotiators said Wednesday that the main sticking point was still whether the industry should be exempt from paying punitive damages.• While the financing is negotiable, the referendum appears to be a major sticking point.• Working out just how to bring us all together is proving to be the sticking point.• The escapees were the sticking point.• The sticking point for purists was over the balance to be struck between state power and voluntary efforts.• The sticking point is, generally, who should get this encouragement?ˈsticking ˌpoint nounChineseSyllable
cannot Corpus something people a of that group
sticking point
ˈsticking ˌpoint
noun [singular]
something that a group of people cannot agree on and that stops them from making progress:
North Korea’s refusal had long been a sticking point.
ˈsticking ˌpoint
noun [singular]something that a group of people cannot agree on and that stops them from making progress: