close to home
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English
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[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Adverb
[edit]close to home (comparative closer to home, superlative closest to home)
- (idiomatic) Affecting people close to, or within, one's family circle.
- (figurative) Affecting one personally through deep familiarity.
- to hit close to home
- 1985, Johnny Marr, Morrissey (lyrics and music), “That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore”, in Meat is Murder, performed by The Smiths:
- […] when you laugh about people who feel so very lonely / […] I wish I could laugh / but that joke isn't funny anymore / it's too close to home / and it's too near the bone
- 2022 September 7, Jennifer Elias, quoting Sundar Pichai, “Google CEO says he hopes to make company 20% more efficient, hints at potential cuts”, in CNBC[2]:
- Smiling, Pichai said he never watched the popular show [Silicon Valley]. “Too close to home,” he remarked. “You watch TV to relax.”
- 2024 May 14, Paul Burston, “Should Baby Reindeer’s creator have written about his alleged stalker? I did the same thing – and it helped me heal”, in The Guardian[3], →ISSN:
- Friends warned me against watching Baby Reindeer, the hit Netflix series about the comedian Richard Gadd and “Martha”, the character based on his alleged real-life stalker. It was too close to home, they said.