rub (up) against (someone or something)
rub (up) against (someone or something)
1. To exert pressure on and move in contact with someone or something. The girl I started dating has a dog that rubs up against me whenever I go over to her house. There's a piece of metal rubbing against the tire that's causing it to wear down very quickly.
2. To exert pressure on and move something while in contact with someone or something else. In this usage, a noun or pronoun is used between "rub" and "(up) against." Someone was rubbing their hand up against my back on the train. It made me really uncomfortable. The elephant rubbed its hindquarters against the large boulder to relieve its itching.
3. To contradict or come into conflict with someone or something. The new report, cowritten by nearly two dozen of the world's top scientists, rubs up against the government's official stance on climate change. Some people simply refuse to accept reality when it rubs up against their own personal world views.
See also: rub
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
rub (up) against someone or something
to bump or scrape against someone or something. The cat rubbed up against me and seemed friendly. The side of the car rubbed against the fence.
See also: rub
rub something against someone or something
to scrape or chafe something against someone or something repeatedly. The cat kept rubbing its tail against me. I wish John would stop rubbing his hand against my leg.
See also: rub
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
- rub against
- rub up on
- rub up against (someone or something)
- muscle in on (someone or something)
- lead (one) (around) by the nose
- lead by the nose
- lead somebody by the nose
- lead someone by the nose
- stroke (one) the wrong way
- stroke someone the wrong way