词汇 | get a rise out of |
释义 | Idiom get a rise out ofget a rise out of (someone) to succeed in annoying someone.Ignore him - he's just trying to get a rise out of you. get a rise out of (one)To prompt an annoyed, irritated, or angry reaction from one; to provoke one so that they will react negatively. Don't pay any attention to him, Bill, he's just trying to get a rise out of you. My brother knows that I'm both gullible and easy to irritate, so he loves getting a rise out of me. get a rise out ofElicit an angry or irritated reaction, as in His teasing always got a rise out of her. This expression alludes to the angler's dropping a fly in a likely spot in the hope that a fish will rise to this bait. get (or take) a rise out ofprovoke an angry or irritated response from someone, especially by teasing them. informalget a rise out of someone, toTo provoke to action or to anger. This term probably comes from fishing, in which the angler drops a fly in a likely spot and lets it float, hoping that the fish will rise to the bait. It was transferred to figurative use—that is, getting someone to lose his or her temper—early in the nineteenth century. Thackeray wrote, “Oh, but it was a rare rise we got out of them chaps” (Catherine, 1840). |
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