hornet

Related to hornet: hornet sting

(as) mad as a hornet

Enraged; extremely or inconsolably angry. My dad was mad as a hornet after I crashed his car. You make me as mad as a hornet with the way you carry on sometimes, you know that?
See also: hornet, mad

be as mad as a hornet

To be very angry. Primarily heard in US. Mom was as mad as a hornet after I dented her brand-new car.
See also: hornet, mad

hornet's nest

1. A dangerous, complicated situation. If we do invade, I fear that we will find ourselves in a real hornet's nest.
2. A situation that produces angry reactions. The politician's off-the-cuff remark about pollution stirred up a hornet's nest among environmentalists.
See also: nest

stir a hornet's nest

1. To create, provoke, or trigger a dangerous, troublesome, or complicated situation. The government's military interventions really just stirred a hornet's nest in the region.
2. To provoke or instigate a lot of very angry or offended reactions. The politician's off-the-cuff remark about pollution stirred a hornet's nest among environmentalists.
See also: nest, stir

stir up a hornet's nest

1. To create, provoke, or trigger a dangerous, troublesome, or complicated situation. The government's military interventions really just stirred up a hornet's nest in the region.
2. To provoke or instigate a lot of very angry or offended reactions. The politician's off-the-cuff remark about pollution stirred up a hornet's nest among environmentalists.
See also: nest, stir, up
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

*mad as a hornet

 and *mad as a wet hen; *mad as hell
very angry. (*Also: as ~. Use hell with caution.) You make me so angry. I'm as mad as a hornet. What you said made Mary mad as a wet hen. Those terrorists make me mad as hell.
See also: hornet, mad

stir up a hornet's nest

Fig. to create a lot of trouble. (Fig. on stir something up .) If you say that to her, you will be stirring up a hornet's nest. There is no need to stir up a hornet's nest.
See also: nest, stir, up
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

mad as a hornet

Also, mad as hell or hops or a wet hen . Very angry, enraged as in Mary was mad as a hornet when her purse was stolen, or Upset? Dan was mad as hell, or The teacher was mad as a wet hen. The use of mad for "angry" dates from about 1300, but these similes are of much more recent vintage (1800s, early 1900s). The allusions to a hornet, which can launch a fierce attack, and hell, with its furious fires, are more obvious than the other variants. Mad as hops was first recorded in 1884 and is thought to have been the writer's version of hopping mad; mad as a wet hen, first recorded in 1823, is puzzling, since hens don't really mind water.
See also: hornet, mad

stir up a hornets' nest

Make trouble, cause a commotion, as in Asking for an audit of the treasurer's books stirred up a hornets' nest in the association. This metaphoric term, likening hornets to angry humans, dates from the first half of the 1700s.
See also: nest, stir, up
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

stir up a hornet's nest

If you stir up a hornet's nest, you do something that makes a lot of people very upset and angry. He has been asking a lot of questions and stirring up a hornet's nest around town. I seem to have stirred up a hornet's nest with my article about the teaching of Shakespeare in schools. Note: Sometimes people just talk about a hornet's nest. It's not that companies are unaware of illegal software. It's more that they are scared of uncovering a hornet's nest — they would simply rather not know. Wasserman had no idea what a hornet's nest he was stepping into. Note: A hornet is a large wasp with a powerful sting.
See also: nest, stir, up

mad as a hornet

mainly AMERICAN
If you are as mad as a hornet, you are extremely angry. I'll bet he's as mad as a hornet about this whole affair. Note: A hornet is a large wasp.
See also: hornet, mad
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

a hornets' nest

a situation fraught with trouble, opposition, or complications.
1992 New Scientist The notion of these ‘life patents’ has opened up a hornets' nest of moral, legal, social and scientific concerns.
See also: nest
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

a ˈhornet’s nest

a lot of trouble: When Charles got the manager’s job, it stirred up a real hornet’s nest, because everyone was angry about his fast promotion.
A hornet is a large wasp that has a very powerful sting.
See also: nest
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

stir up a hornets' nest, to

To provoke a quarrel or foment trouble. The analogy appears in the Roman playwright Plautus’s Amphitruo (ca. 200 b.c.), in which Sosia tells Amphitryon not to get in trouble by quarreling with his wife. It is cited by Erasmus in his collection of adages and repeated by Rabelais in Pantagruel. In English it appears from the eighteenth century on and remains current.
See also: stir, up
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • (as) mad as a hornet
  • mad as a hornet
  • mad as a snake
  • (as) mad as a snake
  • (as) mad as hops
  • mad as hell
  • be as mad as a hornet
  • (as) mad as a wet hen
  • mad as a wet hen
  • get mad
References in periodicals archive
The aircraft, F/A-18F Super Hornet, is the upgraded variant of the McDonnell Douglas F/A-18 Hornet, which dates back to the Persian Gulf War (August 1990 6 February 1991).
is going to cost you about a third to a quarter of what you will pay when shooting .22 Hornet factory loads.
"Asian hornets arrived in France in 2004 and are now common across large areas of Europe.
CDR: So how did Australia come to select the Super Hornet for the Bridging Air Combat Capability?
Asian hornets are a predator of honey bee colonies and other insects.
"We don't know how many hornets there were, but Tamsin described it as a swarm or nest.
It happens occasionally: Midsummer you stumble across a wasp or hornet nest in an incredibly lousy location.
The European hornet which has been spotted in South Wales
Mr Gellatly advised those who think they have an Asian hornet in their home to catch it as safely as possible, before killing it by freezing it, and sending it to the National Bee Unit for identification.
7 These hornets can cause damage to trees by stripping the bark off to eat the sap.
Fully formed nests of the Japanese giant hornet are the size of a small child.
Australia is the only foreign country to use the Super Hornet, with a fleet of 24 aircraft.
An Asian hornet sighting was confirmed in the Tamworth area of Staffordshire on 2 September 2019.
A DEADLY Asian hornet hovers around a pint of lager in a pub beer garden.
THIS large European hornet caused a stir when it was found by someone in Swiss Valley, Carmarthenshire.