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DictionarySeesicksick and tired
sick and tired of (something)Exceedingly wearied by, bored of, or exasperated with something. I'm sick and tired of doing my boss's errands. If something doesn't change soon, I'm going to quit! I was all gung-ho about this graduate program when I first began, but I must admit that I've grown sick and tired of these boring lectures.See also: and, of, sick, tiredsick and tiredAlso, sick or tired to death . Thoroughly weary or bored, as in I'm sick and tired of these begging phone calls, or She was sick to death of that endless recorded music. These hyperbolic expressions of exasperation imply one is weary to the point of illness or death. The first dates from the late 1700s, the first variant from the late 1800s, and the second variant from the first half of the 1700s. See also: and, sick, tiredsick and tired annoyed about or bored with something and unwilling to put up with it any longer. informalSee also: and, sick, tired sick and tired Thoroughly weary, discouraged, or bored.See also: and, sick, tiredsick and tiredDisgusted, completely weary of. This expression, also put as sick or tired to death, suggests one is fed up to the point of illness or death. J. Hector St. John de Crevecoeur used it in Sketches of 18th-Century America (1783): “I am quite sick and tired of these pretended conscientious non-fighting mortals.”See also: and, sick, tiredAcronymsSeesaturation |