词组 | eat one's heart out |
释义 | Idiom eat one's heart out Theme: SORROW to be very sad (about someone or something).Bill spent a lot of time eating his heart out after his divorce.Sally ate her heart out when she had to sell her house. Idiom eat one's heart out Theme: SADNESS to be very sad (about someone or something).Bill spent a lot of time eating his heart out after his divorce.Sally ate her heart out when she had to sell her house. Idiom eat one's heart out Theme: ENVY to be envious (of someone or something). (Informal.)Do you like my new watch? Well, eat your heart out. It was the last one in the store.Don't eat your heart out about my new car. Go get one of your own. Slang eat one's heart out Theme: SUFFERING 1. tr. to suffer from sorrow or grief. She has been eating her heart out over that jerk ever since he ran away with Tracy.Don't eat your heart out. You really didn't like him that much, did you? 2. tr. to suffer from envy or jealousy. (Usually a command.) Yeah, this one's all mine. Eat your heart out!Eat your heart out! I won it fair and square. eat (one's) heart out1. To feel great sadness. I feel just awful for Mary—she's been eating her heart out ever since she found out she was rejected by her top-choice school. 2. To be very jealous. In this usage, the phrase is often said as an imperative and sometimes mentions a famous person (when the speaker comically claims to be more talented than that person). Eat your heart out—I got tickets to the concert and you didn't! Look at how well I dance now—Gene Kelly, eat your heart out! eat one's heart outFeel bitter anguish, grief, worry, jealousy, or another strong negative emotion. For example, She is still eating her heart out over being fired, or Eat your heart out-my new car is being delivered today. This hyperbolic expression alludes to strong feelings gnawing at one's heart. [Late 1500s] eat one's heart out, toTo worry excessively. “Eating our hearts for weariness and sorrow” appeared in Homer’s Odyssey (ca. 850 b.c.). Presumably here, as in later usage, eating one’s heart is analogous to consuming one’s inmost self with worry or anxiety. Later English writers, including John Lyly and Sir Francis Bacon, ascribed the saying to the Greek philosopher Pythagoras, who also used it (“Eat not thy heart,” Praecentum, ca. 525 b.c.). A modern slangy variant invoking a different feeling is the spoken imperative eat your heart out, meaning “doesn’t that make you jealous.” A translation from the Yiddish es dir oys s’harts, it originated in America in the 1960s and was popularized by the television show Laugh-In. |
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