ChatterBank0 min ago
getting on my nerves
2 Answers
Where does this phrase originate?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The earliest recorded version of the phrase - meaning 'irritating me' or 'making me impatient' - in writing was in a book by C E Merriman published in 1903.
In the absence of any other evidence, that may well be where it originated.
The single word, 'nerve' had meant 'strength' or 'courage' etc for three centuries before that, so perhaps the idea was that anything that 'got on your nerves' was an irritant that sapped your strength or got you down.
In the absence of any other evidence, that may well be where it originated.
The single word, 'nerve' had meant 'strength' or 'courage' etc for three centuries before that, so perhaps the idea was that anything that 'got on your nerves' was an irritant that sapped your strength or got you down.