Adjective
razor thin (not comparable)
Alternative form of razor-thin
Extremely fine; so thin as to be almost invisible.
A very small difference, or advantage, when comparing two items.
The Socialists have a razor-thin majority.
razor thin
“A high-end, fine-dining restaurant always operates on a razor-thin line,” Vettorel says. Source: Internet
Also, a soaring interest burden is expected to slice the company’s razor-thin net margins and erode shareholder returns. Source: Internet
At a press conference on Sept. 23, Anwar declared he had secured a “formidable” parliamentary majority to topple Muhyiddin’s government, which has been clinging to a razor-thin advantage in the national legislature since coming to power in early March. Source: Internet
Carrying revolvers and two-way radios on their belts, they questioned voters, ripped down campaign signs and harassed poll workers, all on behalf of the Republican Party, whose candidate for governor won by a razor-thin margin of 1,797 votes. Source: Internet
From 232, then, a flip of three states with razor-thin margins — Wisconsin (10), Arizona (11), and Georgia (16) — would put the president at 269 electoral votes … a splendiferous tie with the media’s “President-elect” Joe Biden. Source: Internet
Biden has a razor-thin margin, with Wayne County - the state's largest and home to Detroit - still a long way from finished with just 81.2 per cent of expected votes counted. Source: Internet