a glutton for punishment

a glutton for punishment

A person who continues to do things whose consequences they find difficult or unpleasant. I couldn't wait to finish college, but I soon found myself in grad school. I must be a glutton for punishment. Why does George keep getting detention? Is he a glutton for punishment?
See also: glutton, punishment
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

glutton for punishment

Fig. someone who is eager for a burden or some sort of difficulty; someone willing to accept a difficult task. Tom works too hard. He is a glutton for punishment. I enjoy managing difficult projects, but I am a glutton for punishment.
See also: glutton, punishment
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

glutton for punishment

Someone who habitually takes on burdensome or unpleasant tasks or unreasonable amounts of work. For example, Rose agreed to organize the church fair for the third year in a row-she's a glutton for punishment . This expression originated as a glutton for work in the late 1800s, punishment being substituted about a century later.
See also: glutton, punishment
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

a glutton for punishment

If someone is a glutton for punishment, they keep on doing something which most people would find unpleasant or difficult. As well as the early starts riding and late nights working, this glutton for punishment is also studying for a degree. I know it's a big job to take on, but then I've always been a glutton for punishment. Note: A glutton is a greedy person.
See also: glutton, punishment
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

a glutton for punishment

a person who is always eager to undertake hard or unpleasant tasks.
Glutton of — was used figuratively from the early 18th century for someone inordinately fond of the thing specified, especially when translating the Latin phrase helluo librorum ‘a glutton of books’. The possible origin of the present phrase is in early 19th-century sporting slang.
See also: glutton, punishment
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

a ˌglutton for ˈpunishment, ˈwork, etc.

(informal) a person who seems to like doing unpleasant or difficult things: You’re going to drive all the way to London and back in a day? You’re a glutton for punishment, aren’t you? She’s a glutton for work. She stays late every evening.
A glutton is a person who is too fond of food. In this idiom, it refers to a person who seems to be very fond of the thing mentioned.
See also: glutton
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

glutton for punishment, a

A masochist, a person who seeks out odious or onerous tasks, or habitually takes on more than is reasonable. The earliest version of this term was a glutton for work and dates from the latter part of the nineteenth century. It was used by Kipling in his story A Day’s Work (1895): “He’s honest, and a glutton for work.” Whether work is viewed as punishment or not is clearly up to the viewer. The OED, which cites a glutton for punishment only in 1971, makes no such judgment.
See also: glutton
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • a glutton for punishment, work, etc.
  • glutton
  • glutton for punishment
  • glutton for punishment, a
  • punishment
  • get (something) over with
  • get it over with
  • come to a bad end
  • come to a bad/sticky end
  • find (something) out the hard way
References in periodicals archive
Is he a glutton for punishment?We know it isn't easy to run a club in Kenya especially at the moment when corporate apathy to football and sports in general is at its highest.
He is a glutton for punishment, as he broke a shoulder blade fielding last year yet still managed to go in to bat at No11 to help his team win the game!
LORD Alan Sugar is a glutton for punishment it seems.
It makes for some fascinating scientific discoveries, but he really is a glutton for punishment "I really hope my teeth don't fall out at the end of this experiment," he says.
Chelsea open their league account at promoted Burnley tomorrow night, with Mourinho claiming he is a glutton for punishment for shouldering highpressure managerial assignments.
(These were not the women I ended up making friends with, funnily enough.) But, after my third child was born (I'm a glutton for punishment), I was greeted daily on the school run with sympathetic murmurs of, 'Ooh, you look a bit peaky' - otherwise translated as: 'Your eyes are bloodshot, you've put on weight and your skin looks like that of a recently-exhumed corpse.' Of my three children, I did have one who slept through the night right from the beginning, but the memory of my first experience still burned so fiercely I couldn't even bring myself to feel smug.
Possibly a glutton for punishment or possibly just hugely passionate about the great outdoors, he is now filming the third series in Ireland.
The Norwegian must be a glutton for punishment having walked into a club in chaos.
She's a glutton for punishment if ever I heard of one.
Either he's a glutton for punishment, or he's found a way around the problem of giving things up.
"If the cruise wasn't being a glutton for punishment, after we disembarked, we had two days at Disney World."
As a football fan, though, I remain a glutton for punishment, rooting for the only AFC franchise from the 1970 NFL-AFL merger not to make the Super Bowl.
DIRTY Sanchez star Matthew Pritchard is a glutton for punishment - he's taking part in this year's Ironman Wales race.
But, as well as being a glutton for punishment, he is also very successful.
Showing up with a box of donuts to a dental enrollment meeting is a bad idea, unless you are a glutton for punishment.