set by the ears
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- (obsolete) set together by the ears (see quots. 1623, 1712)
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
[edit]set by the ears (third-person singular simple present sets by the ears, present participle setting by the ears, simple past and past participle set by the ears)
- (transitive, idiomatic) To make (a person or persons) argue; to set quarrelling.
- 1623, John Chamberlain, The Works of Francis Bacon, volume 14, Cambridge University Press, published 2011, →ISBN, page 430:
- [The patrimony of the King's children] was not to be recovered but by […] a bloody and uncertain war, and setting all Christendom together by the ears.
- 1712, John Arbuthnot, “The History of John Bull”, in George A. Aitken, The Life and Works of John Arbuthnot, Clarendon Press (1892), page 225:
- Then she used to carry tales and stories from one to another, till she had set the whole neighbourhood together by the ears; […]
- 1862, “The Simonides Controversy”, in K. Simonides, The Periplus of Hannon, Trübner & Co. (1864), page 42:
- never did any man possess in so extraordinary a degree the faculty of setting people by the ears, of provoking dissension, and of creating strife.
- 1913, Fairfax Cartwright, in T. G. Otte, July Crisis, Cambridge University Press (2014), →ISBN, page 140:
- Servia will some day set Europe by the ears and bring about a universal war on the Continent, […]
- 1971, Keith Thomas, Religion and the Decline of Magic, Folio Society, published 2012, page 155:
- Even the best-intentioned minister could set a parish by the ears, so a single-minded insistence on the elimination of a vice could make him a figure of terror rather than an approachable counsellor […].